In presenting this thesis or dissertation as a partial fulfillment... advanced degree from Emory University, I hereby grant to Emory... Distribution Agreement

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In presenting this thesis or dissertation as a partial fulfillment of the requirements for an
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agents the non-exclusive license to archive, make accessible, and display my thesis or
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Signature:
_____________________________ ______________
Navit Robkin
4/10/12
Mental Health and Suicide Among Women in Jumla, Nepal: A Qualitative Exploration
By
Navit Robkin
MPH
Hubert Department of Global Health
_________________________________________ [Chair’s signature]
Dabney Evans
Committee Chair
_________________________________________ [Member’s signature]
Brandon Kohrt
Committee Member
Mental Health and Suicide Among Women in Jumla, Nepal: A Qualitative Exploration
By
Navit Robkin
B.A.
Washington University in St. Louis
2005
Dabney Evans, PhD, MPH
An abstract of
a thesis submitted to the Faculty of the
Rollins School of Public Health of Emory University
in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of
Master of Public Health
in the Hubert Department of Global Health
2012
Abstract
Mental Health and Suicide Among Women in Jumla, Nepal: A Qualitative Exploration
By Navit Robkin
Despite an increased awareness of the growing burden of disease attributable to
mental health issues, mental health and suicide remain low priorities in most low and
middle-income countries (LMIC). A recent study from Nepal found that suicide was the
leading cause of death among women of childbearing age. While researchers have
demonstrated a strong relationship between mental health disorders and suicide in upper
income countries, this association is weaker in LMIC, where many suggest cultural
stressors play a more significant role in suicidal behavior. The current study explored
how different cultural stressors affect mental health and lead to suicidal ideation/behavior
among women in Nepal. Women were selected to participate in in-depth interviews based
on previous participation in a related mental health study. They were asked about their
general mental well being, daily lives, and attitudes toward suicide. Six dominant themes
emerged as most relevant to the women’s lives and views on suicide: 1) mental health
issues (including depression/sadness and anxiety/worry); 2) economics; 3) education; 4)
domestic issues (including domestic strife and alcohol abuse and love vs.
arranged/captured marriage); 5) differential gender impacts (including personal attitudes
and community response toward child gender and male vs. female work balance); and 6)
suicide (including reasons for committing suicide, impulsivity in suicide, speculation of
family involvement in suicide, and reactions toward suicide). This study suggests that
cultural stressors negatively impact female mental health and eventual suicidal ideation
and/or decision to attempt suicide. These cultural stressors are related to differential
gender impacts of modernization that lead to repression of women and shifts in male
roles in society. The study also suggests that most suicides are committed impulsively,
without true intention to die. Interventions for mental health issues and suicide in Nepal
should address cultural stressors such as domestic violence, alcoholism, and women’s
access to income and education. Particular emphasis should be placed on incorporating
men into intervention planning and dissemination. Additionally, findings about the role
of impulsive behavior in suicide suggest that those with suicidal ideation would best be
treated with Dialectical Behavior Therapy, which uses techniques that would be familiar
to the local community.
Mental Health and Suicide Among Women in Jumla, Nepal: A Qualitative Exploration
By
Navit Robkin
B.A.
Washington University in St. Louis
2005
Dabney Evans, PhD, MPH
A thesis submitted to the Faculty of the
Rollins School of Public Health of Emory University
in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of
Master of Public Health
in the Hubert Department of Global Health
2012
Acknowledgements
This thesis would not have been possible without the help of several individuals who
gave of their time and expertise to guide, advise, and encourage me through the process.
I owe my deepest gratitude to my supervisor, Brandon Kohrt. His unceasing support,
mentorship, and faith in me from the initial to the final levels of the project enabled me to
develop an understanding of the subject and bring the thesis to fruition. I am heartily
thankful to my thesis advisor, Dabney Evans, whose encouragement and guidance
directed me through the thesis process. Her academic and personal support made this
often grueling undertaking a pleasure.
I am indebted to my many research colleagues who supported me in the field: Anita
Patel, Nanda Raj Acharya, Silu Shrestha, and Sujen Man. Without their assistance, this
research project would not have been possible. Finally, I want to thank my family. My
husband Ori was endlessly patient and encouraging. He pushed me to explore new
aspects of the research and had more faith in me than I could have had for myself. And
finally I am indebted (emotionally and fiscally) to my parents, Judy and Shai. Their
guidance, through explicit encouragement and modeling, allowed me to explore the
world of social justice and globalism.
Table of Contents
1. Chapter 1: Introduction…………………..………………………………..…………1
Background on Nepal………………………………………………….…….……4
Background on the People’s War in Nepal………………………………………..6
2. Chapter 2: Comprehensive Review of the Literature……………………..………..8
Mental Health and Suicide in Lower and Middle Income Countries…..………..12
Mental Health and Suicide in Asia………………………………………………15
Mental Health and Suicide in Nepal……………………………………………..25
Current Study…………………………………………………………………….31
3. Chapter 3: Methods……………………………………………………….....………33
2000 Study……………………………………………………………………….33
2007 Study…………………………………………………………………….…33
Current Study (2011) ……………………………………………………………34
4. Chapter 4: Results……………………………………………..…………..…………41
Case Studies of Suicidal Ideation……………………………………………..…41
In-Depth Interviews………………………………………………………...……46
Mental Health Issues……………………………………………………..48
Depression/sadness………………………………………………48
Anxiety/worry……………………………………………………51
Economics……………………………………………………………..…53
Education…………………………………………………………...……55
Domestic Issues………………………………………………………….58
Domestic strife and alcohol abuse……………………………….58
Love vs. arranged/captured marriages……………………...……62
Differential Gender Impact…………………………………………..…..66
Personal attitudes & community response toward child gender…66
Male vs. female work balance…………………………….……..69
Suicide……………………………………………………………………72
Reasons for committing suicide……………………………….....73
Impulsivity in suicide…………………………………….………77
Speculation of family involvement in suicide……………….…..79
Reactions toward suicide……………………………...…………80
5. Chapter 4: Discussion/Conclusion/Recommendations……………...………..……82
Discussion…………………………………………………………..……………82
Strengths/Limitations…………………………………………….………………94
Conclusion…………………………………………………………….…………94
Implications/Recommendations……………………………….…………………95
6. References……………………………………………………………………...…..…98
7. Appendix
Acronyms………………………...…………...……………………..…………116
Glossary………………………………………....…………………..…………117
8. Tables and Figures
Figure 1. Map of Nepal………………………...…………………………………...…5
Table 1. Main and sub-themes identified in in-depth interviews………….…………46
Table 2. Characteristics of Women in Case Studies/In-depth Interviews…………...47
Figure 2. The effects of societal factors on female mental health and suicide in Jumla,
Nepal………………………...…………………………………...…………………..92
1
Chapter 1: Introduction
The global burden of disease attributable to neuropsychiatric disorders has risen
dramatically in the past decade and is expected to continue to rise, with the greatest
increases expected in developing countries (Patel, Saraceno, & Kleinman, 2006).
Neuropsychiatric disorders account for 1.2 million deaths every year (Mathers & Loncar,
2006). However, suicidal behavior is not included under neuropsychiatric disorders, and
therefore, the actual burden of disease ascribed to mental health conditions may be
greater than documented. Yearly, more than one million people commit suicide (Peden,
McGee, & Krug, 2002), with most suicides occurring in lower and middle-income
countries (LMIC) (Patel, 2007).
The impact of mental health conditions, medically, economically, and socially, is
immense. Mental health conditions can greatly affect the physical health of an individual
as well as those around them. The physical health impacts of a mental health disorder are
of particular severity in resource poor settings, where clinicians and funding for mental
health care are sparse. Economically, mental health conditions extract a great expense to
society, costing individuals and governments trillions of dollars in care and loss of
productivity (Bloom et al., 2011). Socially, mental health conditions greatly impact
quality of life for the affected individual and family/friends.
In general, women are more likely to suffer from mental health disorders
compared to men (Shidhaye & Patel, 2010). In fact, studies have shown that the link
between mental health disorders and suicide may be stronger in females than in males
(Qin, Agerbo, Westergard-Nielsen, Eriksson, & Mortensen, 2000). Additionally, while
more men commit suicide in upper income countries, in LMIC, female suicides often
2
outnumber male suicides (Mayer & Ziaian, 2002; World Health Organization, 1999).
Theories suggest this may be due to gender inequality, class disparities, poverty, and
domestic issues.
The mental health and suicide situation in Asia is of particular gravity. Suicide in
Asia accounts for approximately 60% of the world’s suicides (Beautrais, 2006).
Although some studies have found a link between mental health conditions and suicide in
Asia, this link is thought to be weaker in the region than in other parts of the world.
Rather, cultural factors (such as residence, marriage, and socio-economic status) and
stressors (such as economics and patriarchal society) are hypothesized to play a larger
role in suicidal behavior in Asia (Vijayakumar & Rajkumar, 1999). It is theorized that the
impact of modernization on traditional societies may be leading to the increase in mental
health disorders and suicidal behaviors. Modernization may lead to instability within the
society and change traditional roles within the family. This has been found to be
especially relevant in rural areas, which often do not benefit from the advantageous
aspects of economic growth. Women may suffer more, with their traditional roles
remaining firm in the face of a changing society (Pradhan, Poudel, Thomas, & Barnett,
2010). Additionally, there has been a dramatic increase in alcohol abuse, and subsequent
domestic violence, among men as a result of modernization in Asia (Patel, 2007).
The mental health situation in Nepal is reflective of the greater mental health state
in Asia and other LMIC. Nepal experienced a civil war from 2001-2006, affecting
thousands of individuals and having a sizeable mental health toll. The alarming mental
health situation in Nepal, especially among women, was highlighted by findings from the
Nepal Maternal Mortality and Morbidity (MMM) Survey (2008/2009) which found that
3
suicide was the leading cause of death amongst women of reproductive age (15-49) in
Nepal. Previous studies have also found a high burden of anxiety and depression among
Nepali women.
To ensure the complete health of an individual and of a community, it is vital to
address mental health issues and the reasons for the increases in suicidal behavior. This
study explores how different cultural factors and stressors affect mental health and
subsequently lead to suicidal behavior and ideation among women. This study has widereaching policy, clinical, and public health practice applications. By gaining a better
understanding of how women are affected by their environments, local and state
governments can begin to address issues of structural inequality that may affect female
mental health. Through a deeper understanding of women’s situations, researchers and
clinicians can begin to address the growing mental health needs in LMIC among women
and reduce rising suicide rates. Interventions can then be constructed that address the
particular situations of women in LMIC and confront deep seeded cultural issues, which
lead to mental health problems and suicidal behavior. This can drastically shift the focus
from an individual, medicalized approach to mental health to a public mental health
approach which views the individual as part of a larger ecological system.
No research has yet to consider why there has been an increase in suicides among
women in Nepal. Without such knowledge, clinicians and researchers are unable to move
forward with addressing the mental health challenges in Nepal. While some studies have
looked at cultural stressors that impact female mental health in Nepal, this research needs
to be reevaluated in light of the recent findings from the Nepal MMM 2008/2009. By
examining the impacts of cultural factors and stressors on women and exploring the
4
attitudes and beliefs of women about suicide, one can begin to understand how women in
LMIC are emotionally affected by their environments. Through a more complex
understanding, culturally appropriate and relevant interventions can be designed that
address the situation head on. Filling in this knowledge gap and using this knowledge to
address the needs of women in LMIC can drastically improve the situation of women in
LMIC.
This study attempts to fill in the knowledge gap through a qualitative exploration of
the roles of cultural factors on female mental health and suicide in Nepal. The goals of
the study were to consider; a) how the roles of different sociocultural factors (such as
marital relationships, social supports, and female roles in society) effect women’s mental
health, b) women’s beliefs and attitudes about suicide, and c) contributing factors toward
committing suicide. The results from these three research goals provide a detailed
depiction of the situation for women in Nepal and can shed light on the situation of
women in other LMIC.
Background on Nepal
Nepal is a South Asian country located between China and India (see figure 1).
The southern region of the country is primarily flat river plains, with the central region
containing hilly areas and the northern region made up of the Himalayan mountains. The
highest point within the country is Mount Everest, standing at 8,850 meters. In the
summer monsoon season, the country is often plagued by flooding, landslides, and severe
thunderstorms, hindering development and transportation throughout the region.
Figure 1. Map of Nepal
5
Source: (United Nations Development Programme, 2010)
Nepal’s population of approximately 29 million (as of July 2011) (Central
Intelligence Agency, 2011) falls mostly between the ages of 15-64 (61.1% of the
population), with a median age of 21.6 years. As of 2011, the birth rate is 22.17 births
per 1,000 population (Central Intelligence Agency, 2011). Life expectancy at birth is
68.8 years, putting it 157th in the world in terms of life expectancy (United Nations
Development Programme, 2011c). The mean years of schooling of adults is 3.2 years,
with a 60.3% adult literacy rate.
Nepal ranked 157 out of 169 countries on the human development index (HDI)
(United Nations Development Programme, 2011b) and almost a fourth of the population
of Nepal lives below the poverty line, placing the country amongst the poorest and least
6
developed countries in the world (Central Intelligence Agency, 2011). While Nepal’s
HDI has risen over the past thirty years, it still falls below the South Asian regional HDI
average.
Additionally, the Gender Inequality Index for Nepal in 2011 was 0.558, placing it
157th out of 187 countries on a composite measure reflecting inequality in achievements
between men and women in reproductive health, empowerments, and the labor market
(United Nations Development Programme, 2011a). Although research has shown that
Nepal has made strides in gender development in recent years, gender disparities still
exist, particularly in the realms of education, health, and economic assets (United Nations
Population Fund, 2007). In general, women in rural, mountainous regions of Nepal fair
worse on gender equality indicators than do women from urban plain regions of Nepal.
Additionally, women from the mid-western region of Nepal fair worse than women in
other regions of the country (United Nations Population Fund, 2007).
Background on the People’s War in Nepal
In 1996, the “People’s War” between the Communist Party of Nepal (Maoists)
and government security forces began. The goal of the Maoists was to overthrow the
Nepali monarchy and establish the “People’s Republic of Nepal,” with an emphasis on
rights for the underserved and peripheral populations of the country (i.e. poor
communities, women and ethnic minorities) (Tol et al., 2010). In the early years of the
war, violence was primarily limited to targeting police stations and state-run businesses
(R. A. Koenig & Kohrt, 2009). However, in 2001, the war took a more violent turn with
the massacre of the royal family, thereby instating a new king, King Gyanendra, into
7
power. Wherein before the massacre, fighting primarily took place between police forces
and Maoists, after King Gyanendra’s ordination, the Royal Nepal Army began to fight
against the Maoists.
In 2006, the government of Nepal and the Maoists signed a comprehensive peace
agreement, ending the war and incorporating the Maoists into the government. By the end
of the war in 2006, approximately 15,000 people had been killed and an estimated
100,0000 to 150,000 people were internally displaced. During the war, there was
widespread use of torture, recruitment of child soldiers, violence, and destruction of
infrastructure (Singh, 2004, 2005; Singh, Sharma, Mills, Poudel, & Jimba, 2007; Tol et
al., 2007).
The following chapters will present a comprehensive review of the literature on
mental health and suicide in LMIC as well as in Nepal specifically, the methodology of
the current study, results from the study, and finally, a discussion of the results as well as
the public health implications of the findings. With thorough knowledge of the
background behind the mental health situation in Nepal and an analysis of the findings
from the current study, one can begin to recognize how cultural stressors may affect a
woman and lead her to suicidal ideation and behaviors. Equipped with this knowledge,
suicide interventions can be designed that not only aid women in Nepal, but help women
throughout LMIC.
8
Chapter 2: Comprehensive Review of the Literature
Until the early 1990’s, mental health was not widely acknowledged or accepted as
a field within general public health. However, the World Development Report published
in 2003 (World Bank, 1993) ushered mental health into the public health field with a new
level of importance. The subsequent Global Burden of Disease report, originally
published in 1990 and revised in 2004 (World Health Organization, 2008a), further
highlighted the importance of mental health within the public health domain. These two
seminal reports underlined the impact of mental health disorders on society by comparing
health conditions based on global burden of disease using disability-adjusted life years
(DALY). The DALY scale calculates the impact of diseases on a unified scale based on
“years lost due to premature mortality and years of life lost due to time lived in states of
less than full health” (World Health Organization, 2012). The side-by-side comparison of
mental health disorders with other health issues exposed the huge burden of disease
imposed by mental health disorders throughout the world (Saraceno et al., 2007).
In 2000, the global burden of disease attributable to mental, neurological, and
substance use disorders was 12.3%. It is expected to rise to 14.7% by 2020, with even
greater increases expected in developing countries (Patel, et al., 2006). These projections
may be a gross underestimation of the total burden of disease caused by neuropsychiatric
disorders, since death by suicide is categorized as “intentional injury” rather than
ascribed to a mental health condition (Prince et al., 2007).
While it took years for mental health to gain acceptance within the public health
community, research has consistently shown that mental health is closely linked with
other public health issues. Stress and anxiety have been shown to be related to increased
9
rates of myocardial infarction, with subsequent increases in depression (Penninx et al.,
2001). Particularly in resource-poor settings, maternal depression has been associated
with poor prenatal care, poor nutrition for the children, an increased risk of child physical
health problems, incomplete immunizations, and poor physical health of the mother
(Patel, 2007; World Health Organization, 2011). The effect of having a mother with
mental health problems extends throughout development, affecting the child physically
(through impaired motor development), emotionally (through poor mother-infant
attachment), and cognitively (through poor nutrition and child care) (Prince, et al., 2007).
In addition, alcohol abuse is a major risk factor for numerous infectious diseases, such as
HIV/AIDS and other sexually transmitted diseases (Catalan, 1999). Finally, according to
the World Health Organization (WHO), neuropsychiatric disorders account for 1.2
million deaths every year and 1.4% of all years-of-life lost (Mathers & Loncar, 2006).
Differences in socio-economic status (SES) and gender have been shown to lead
to differences in mental health disorders. The following demographic and socioeconomic factors have been shown to place someone at greater risk of suffering from a
mental health disorder: inhabiting a lower socio-economic group, low educational
attainment, amassment of debt, or facing acute economic difficulties (Patel, 2007;
Shidhaye & Patel, 2010). Males are more likely than females to engage in self-destructive
behaviors, such as substance abuse (Li, Page, Martin, & Taylor, 2011) and women are
one and half to two times more likely to suffer from common mental disorders (CMDs)
compared to men (Shidhaye & Patel, 2010). The Global Burden of Disease Report 2004
found that the burden of depression was 50% higher for females than for males, placing
depression as the leading cause of disease burden for women of reproductive age (World
10
Health Organization, 2008a). Finally, studies have shown that the link between mental
health disorders and suicide may be stronger in females than in males (Qin, et al., 2000).
The global suicide rate has risen by 60% in the last 45 years (Pradhan, et al.,
2010) and the WHO projects that over the coming decades, suicide will become an even
greater contributor to the global burden of disease (Mathers & Loncar, 2006). Currently,
over one million people commit suicide each year (Peden, et al., 2002), taking more lives
than homicides and wars combined (World Health Organization, 2003). Most individuals
commit suicide in their prime productive years, between the ages of 15 and 44 (Prince, et
al., 2007), reflecting a high cost to society. Over the next 20 years, neuropsychiatric
disorders are expected to result in a loss of $16.1 trillion US dollars, with “dramatic
impacts on productivity and quality of life” (Bloom, et al., 2011).
Research shows that those who attempt suicide once and fail are at an increased
risk of subsequent completed suicide (Pradhan, et al., 2010). In addition to completed
suicides, there are approximately 10-20 million attempted suicides and 50-120 million
people who are affected by the suicide or attempted suicide of a close relative or friend
(World Health Organization, 2008b). Although suicide is not categorized with other
neuropsychiatric disorders, the association between suicide and mental health disorders
has been well established, with over 90% of suicides related to a mental health disorder
(Lamichhane, 2010). A systematic review of psychological autopsies conducted by
Cavinagh et al (2003) found a median mental disorder prevalence of 91% for suicide
completers, with depression and schizophrenia identified as important suicidal risk
factors (Cavanagh, Carson, Sharpe, & Lawrie, 2003).
11
Therefore, to ensure the complete health of an individual and of a community, it is
vital to consider mental health within a public health framework. WHO posits that
indeed, there can be “no health without mental health” (Prince, et al., 2007). However,
despite an increased awareness in the growing burden of disease attributable to mental
health diseases, mental health remains a low priority in most low and middle-income
countries (LMIC) (Prince, et al., 2007). This gap is critical to address because LMIC
disproportionally experience turmoil and political violence, which may result in a high
burden of psychosocial and mental health difficulties (Mollica et al., 2004). Studies have
found post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) rates of up to 50% among children (Sack et
al., 1993) and 37% among adults effected by political turmoil (Mollica et al., 1993) and
rates of depression of close to 70% among children (Savin, Sack, Clarke, Meas, &
Richart, 1996) and adults (Mollica, et al., 1993) affected by political turmoil.
Nepal, located in southern Asia, is one country whose mental health needs have
long been under-prioritized and underfunded. Nepal experienced a civil war from 20012006, leaving thousands killed and over 100,000 displaced. As in other countries that
experienced conflict, the mental health impacts of the war may be immense. Yet, few
resources have been dedicated to researching the mental health effects of the war or to
offering mental health services to those in need.
The Nepal Maternal Mortality and Morbidity study conducted in 2008/2009 drew
attention to the lack of resources directed to mental health and the profound repercussions
that this can have on a society. The study found that suicide was the leading cause of
death amongst women of reproductive age (15-49) in Nepal. While in 1998 suicide
accounted for 10% for all deaths of women of reproductive age, in 2008/2009 16% of all
12
deaths among women of reproductive age were attributable to suicide. A closer look at
mental health and suicide in LMIC and Asia in particular provides a foundation on which
to approach the current state of mental health in Nepal.
Mental Health and Suicide in Lower and Middle Income Countries
Eighty percent of the global population lives in LMIC. However, only 6% of the
published mental health research has been conducted in LMIC (Patel, 2007). Based on
research conducted by Vikram Patel (2007), neuropsychiatric disorders, including
depressive disorders, schizophrenia, epilepsy, alcohol and drug use disorders, and anxiety
disorders (list not exhaustive), account for 9.8% of the total burden of disease in LMIC
(Patel, 2007). If self-inflicted injury is added to the category of “neuropsychiatric
disorders”, the proportion increases to 11.1%.
An estimated 86% of worldwide suicides come from LMIC (Prince, et al., 2007),
accounting for 1.5% of all deaths in LMIC (Patel, 2007). Although suicide is a major
public health problem in LMIC, it has attracted relatively little epidemiological
investigation and existent studies may vastly underestimate the degree to which suicide is
a problem (Vijayakumar, Nagaraj, Pirkis, & Whiteford, 2005). Many LMIC do not have a
reliable and thorough surveillance and mortality categorization system in place
(Bertolote, Fleischmann, Butchart, & Besbelli, 2006; World Health Organization, 2008b)
and cultural attitudes toward suicide and fear about prosecution may lead friends and
family members of an individual who completed suicide to misrepresent the cause of
death (Prasad et al., 2006).
13
Pesticide Ingestion as a Means of Suicide.
A developing trend worldwide is the use of pesticides to commit suicide.
According to the WHO, the use of pesticides to commit suicide is now the most common
method of suicide worldwide (Bertolote, et al., 2006), with an estimated one third of the
world's suicides caused by pesticide ingestion (Gunnell, et al., 2007). This estimate may
be lower than the reality because it is highly influenced by inaccurate reporting,
especially out of India.
While pesticides are gaining momentum as a suicide method of choice worldwide,
they are gaining particular traction in LMIC compared to upper income countries
(Ajdacic-Gross et al., 2008). For instance, in upper income countries, people turn to
relatively non-toxic drugs – such as analgesics, tranquillizers, and antidepressants – in
order to intentionally overdose. Because of the low toxicity of these drugs, case fatality
rates have been found to be around 0.5% (Gunnell, Do, & Murray, 2004). In contrast,
pesticides, a method of overdose common in LMIC, are highly lethal and widely
available, resulting in fatality rates between 10-20% (Eddleston, 2000).
The higher case fatality resulting from the ingestion of pesticides is striking given
that the majority of individuals who attempt suicide do not intend to die (Gunnell &
Eddleston, 2003). Studies have found that many suicides by pesticide ingestion in LMIC
are related to impulsivity, stress, and misinformation (Jacob, 2008). For instance, studies
from Sri Lanka and Bangladesh have shown that some individuals who attempted suicide
by pesticide ingestion do not know the lethality of such substances. These studies showed
that some women had the “intention to shock and were unaware that such actions might
14
cause serious and irreversible damage” (Pradhan, et al., 2010). However, they did not
intend to die.
Suicidal impulses are thought to be “short-lived” and preventable if the means of
self-harm are not easily available (Gunnell & Eddleston, 2003). For instance, pesticide
fatalities have been found to be common among individuals who commit “impulsive acts
of self-harm” with “low intent to die” (Gunnell, et al., 2007). Typically, impulsive
suicides result from rash reactions to serious negative life events, such as financial losses,
relationship difficulties, and interpersonal conflicts (Law & Liu, 2008). The ubiquitous
availability of pesticides in LMIC may therefore be influencing regional suicide patterns
(World Health Organization, 2008b).
Gender and Suicide.
The gender demographics of suicide in LMIC are distinct from gender
demographics of suicides in upper income countries. Whereas suicides amongst men
greatly outnumber suicides amongst women in upper income countries, the suicide rate in
LMIC is often similar between genders, with female suicides many times outnumbering
male suicides (Mayer & Ziaian, 2002; World Health Organization, 1999). There are
many theories for why women may commit suicide at equal or higher rates than men in
LMIC. One popular theory is that female mental health in LMIC is greatly effected by
“the perceived social and economic burden of being female (associated with factors like
dowry expectations and reduced earning capacity)” (Vijayakumar, et al., 2005). Others
postulate that women in LMIC are highly affected by difficult romantic relationships,
resulting from restricted marriage choice and arranged and captured marriages (Lee &
15
Klienman, 2000). Sometimes women chose suicide when prevented from marrying the
man of their choice (Vijayakumar & Thilothammal, 1993).
Surprisingly, several studies have found that high levels of inequality within a
country were associated with low overall suicide rates among both men and women.
While these findings seem counterintuitive, they may actually explain the high rates of
suicide found in some LMIC. Low levels in inequality in LMIC may just equate to mass
poverty, with high levels of inequality equating to significant class disparities. On the
other hand, in many LMIC, high inequality is often associated with more traditional
societies, where poverty, minimization of individual needs, and lack of equality may be
internalized (Vijayakumar, et al., 2005), and therefore, individuals may not feel the
impulse to attempt suicide.
Mental Health and Suicide in Asia
There are over 300,000 suicide related deaths each year in Asia, accounting for
approximately 60% of the world’s suicides (Beautrais, 2006). For instance, the suicide
rate in China is two to three times higher than the global average (Law & Liu, 2008). A
study from south India found that suicide accounted for a quarter of all deaths in boys and
up to three-quarters of all deaths in young women (Aaron et al., 2004).
A Chinese psychological autopsy study found that 30% of individuals who died
from suicide had high depressive symptom scores (the single most important factor
associated with suicide) (Phillips et al., 2002). Yet, the percentage of individuals who
completed suicide in China with high depressive scores is lower than found in Europe
and the United States. This leads some researchers to postulate that cultural stressors,
16
rather than depression or other mental health disorders, play a greater role in suicidal risk
in Asian countries than they do in Europe and the United States of America
(Vijayakumar, et al., 2005).
Pesticide fatalities have been found to be especially high in Asia (Gajalakshmi &
Peto, 2007; Pradhan, et al., 2010). Studies conducted in Sri Lanka (Jeyaratnam, 1985),
found pesticide related suicide to be one of the leading methods of suicide. Pesticide
related suicides have been found to be especially concentrated in rural areas of Asia,
including rural India and China (Joseph et al., 2003; Phillips, Li, & Zhang, 2002).
However, the actual rates of pesticide related suicide are unknown due to underreporting,
particularly out of India (Gunnell, et al., 2007).
Suicide is illegal in India, increasing the rate of under-reporting (Gajalakshmi &
Peto, 2007; World Health Organization, 2008b). Studies conducted in south India have
found that rates of suicide were three to ten times greater than official estimates (Aaron,
et al., 2004; Gunnell, et al., 2007; Prasad, et al., 2006) and only about 10 percent of
deaths were medically certified (Bhat, 1991). Many deaths, particularly in rural areas, are
not registered at all partly because of an inefficient registration system and partly because
families fear the social and legal consequences associated with suicide.
Suicide Risk Factors.
Risk factors that have been shown to be associated with suicide in Asia include
location of residence, gender, age and socio-economic status (SES). The literature points
to rurality as a possible risk factor for suicide in Asian countries. For instance, suicide
rates in rural areas of China are three times higher than those rates in urban areas (World
17
Health Organization, 2008b). Similarly, the suicide rate in rural farming areas in Sri
Lanka is more than double that of the country’s capital (World Health Organization,
2008b). Comparable findings have come from India, where the suicide rate in rural areas
is three times higher than the overall national suicide rate (National Crime Records
Bureau, 2000). Many theorists attribute the increased suicide rates in rural areas of Asia
to greater access to pesticides. In addition to the high lethality of this method, pesticides
may result in death for individuals in rural areas due to lack of effective resuscitation
services (Eddleston & Phillips, 2004). Studies have also found that there is a higher risk
of suicide in those from lower socio-economic groups compared to those in higher socioeconomic groups (Li, et al., 2011).
Age has also been noted as a risk factor for suicide in Asia. High rates of suicide
among young adults have been attributed to academic pressures and shame associated
with failure (Law & Liu, 2008; World Health Organization, 2008b). Others point to rapid
modernization in the developing world as affecting younger people greater, and more
selectively, than older individuals. Without mature coping skills, these young individuals
crumble in the face of pressures “especially with fewer role models and traditions upon
which to rely” (Law & Liu, 2008). All of these potential causes of suicide have been
found to be especially germane to young, rural females (Law & Liu, 2008). A study from
China found that among individuals younger the 60, rural female suicide rates exceeded
rural male rates by an average of 66% (Law & Liu, 2008).
High rates of suicide amongst women, compared to men, have been noted
throughout Asia (Gajalakshmi & Peto, 2007). For instance, in China, women exhibited
higher lifetime prevalence for suicidal ideation than males (Lee et al., 2007) and women
18
attempt suicide at a 2.5:1 rate compared to men (Yang et al., 2005). Another study from
China found that in individuals younger the 60, female rates exceeded male rates by an
average of 26% (Lee, et al., 2007).
Similar to suicides in other LMIC, suicides amongst women in Asia have
commonly been attributed to the pervasive patriarchal society that causes women
economic and social difficulties (Lee & Klienman, 2000). In these societies, marital
status plays a much more important role than it does elsewhere. Studies conducted in
both India and Pakistan found a higher incidence of suicide among married compared to
single or divorced women (Khan, 2002). Associated factors include early marriage and
motherhood, lack of marital choice, infertility or absence of male offspring, and
economic dependence (Ali, Israr, Ali, & Janjua, 2009; Kohrt et al., 2009).
Gender and Inequality in Asia.
In recent years, there has been growing interest and concern over the role of
oppressive attitudes and discriminatory behaviors towards women in LMIC as major
contributors to mental health disorders and suicide. For instance, gender inequality has
been shown to contribute to women’s risk for depression in LMIC (Ali, et al., 2009). In
many patriarchal societies found throughout Asia, women inhabit a second class status,
with limited opportunities for independence, upward mobility, employment, and selfworth and self-image unrelated to a male relative or husband (Niaz & Hassan, 2006).
Accordingly, they experience financial restrictions and emotional dependence, limiting
their life choices. These factors, along with a multitude of other family, social, and work
pressures have had a definite impact on women’s mental health in Asia. It is vital to be
19
aware of the far-reaching consequences of violence against women, beyond the
immediate personal ramifications. Violence against women is “likely to constrain
poverty reduction efforts by reducing women’s participation in productive employment…
[It also] undermines efforts to improve women’s access to education, with violence and
the fear of violence contributing to lower school enrollment for girls” (Garcia-Moreno &
Watts, 2011).
Women’s role in Asian traditional societies is extensively discussed throughout
the literature on female mental health. Of particular salience is the customary belief that
“girls are born to be fed throughout their lives” and “boys are born to earn and support
the whole family” (Niaz & Hassan, 2006). While the birth of boys is greatly celebrated,
the birth of girls is often unwelcome (Niaz & Hassan, 2006). In some rural areas of
China and India, girl children may even become the victims of infanticide due to their
gender (Law & Liu, 2008; Niaz & Hassan, 2006). The mental health effects of this type
of gender discrimination are far reaching.
Gender discrimination in Asia has resulted in staggering levels of violence against
women. For instance, a study conducted in India found that almost half of all women
reported physical violence (Jejeebhoy, 1998). Ample evidence shows an association
between domestic violence and mental health issues amongst women (Fischbach &
Herbert, 1997). A study from Pakistan found that 34% of women reported being
physically abused and of these women, 72% had anxiety or depression (Ali, et al., 2009).
Findings from 10 studies published in a WHO report revealed that women who had ever
experienced physical or sexual partner violence, or both, reported significantly higher
levels of emotional distress and were more likely to have thoughts of suicide or attempt
20
suicide than women who had never experienced domestic violence (Garcia-Moreno,
Jansen, Ellsberg, Heise, & Watts, 2005).
One of the most frequent factors cited for women committing suicide is conflict
with husbands and in-laws. A study conducted in Pakistan emphasized that women who
experienced domestic violence from husbands and in-laws had no form of escape, as
patriarchal societies view these acts as generally acceptable (Khan, 1998). Therefore,
their only form of perceived escape might have been suicide. The social and familial
pressures to stay married in an arranged marriage, even in an abusive relationship, appear
to increase the risk of depression and suicide in women (Gururaj, Isaac, Isaac,
Subbakrishna, & Ranjani, 2004). One study from Pakistan found a positive association
between depression and arranged marriage and younger age at marriage (Ali, et al.,
2009). Another type of suicide taking place in Asia – deemed “revenge suicide” - occurs
when an abused women who is not protected by her support group commits suicide with
the intention that others will “take vengeance on the abusive husband” (Khan, 2002).
In a multi-country study looking at domestic violence, there were noticeable
differences in the magnitude of violence perpetrated in traditional vs. modernizing
societies. There was a higher proportion of violence that quantified as “severe” in more
traditional, rural settings that in city settings (Garcia-Moreno, Jansen, Ellsberg, & Watts,
2006). In recent years, however, there appears to be a trend toward modernization in
rural areas, leading to mental health strains.
The increasing focus on gender inequality has led to a shift in research priorities
in the realm of women’s mental health, from a medicalized perspective emphasizing the
role of mental illness history, to a societal focus, emphasizing the role of social and
21
economic stressors on depression and suicidal risk amongst women in LMIC (Maselko &
Patel, 2007). For instance, several studies have reported that mental illness is rarely
reported as a cause of suicide in Asia. Rather interpersonal problems and domestic
violence are more frequently cited as the causes of suicide (Ahmed & Zuberi, 1981; Lee,
et al., 2007). A study conducted by Vijaykumar and Rajkumar (1999) actually found
evidence to the contrary, citing that 88% of suicides in their case-control study had a
lifetime prevalence of a DSM-III-R Axis I disorder in 88% cases (Vijayakumar &
Rajkumar, 1999).
A community cohort study conducted in India found that both mental health
disorders and SES factors contribute to suicidal risk amongst women, with SES factors
serving as a stronger predictor of suicide than mental health disorders. Suicidal risk
factors included a baseline diagnosis of mental health disorders, hunger in previous 3
months, current family debt, young age at marriage, and experience of violence and
physical illness (Maselko & Patel, 2007).
Modernization in Asia.
The associations between mental health/suicide and modernization have been
minimally explored in Asia. Many researchers and theorists assume that development and
modernization have a negative effect on mental health. They claim that while
modernization has been occurring in the West for hundreds of years, the sudden postcolonial development in LMIC has led to accelerated exposure of individuals to foreign
values (Pradhan, et al., 2010). This exposure to foreign values and ways of life may have
22
“serious implications for individual wellbeing and increases suicidal vulnerability”
(Pradhan, et al., 2010).
Vikram Patel (2006) explained that although “developing countries are witnessing
social and economic changes at a pace that is unparalleled in history…not everyone has
benefited from these changes” (Patel, et al., 2006). Modernization brings along with it
economic developments, leading to migration from rural to urban areas and a breakdown
of traditional societies. Social networks are often weakened by the dispersion of skilled
laborers and household economies are drastically altered. Additionally, modernizing
economies are increasingly reliant on international trade, reducing the cost of consumer
goods, leading to unemployment of small-scale entrepreneurs and farmers (Patel, et al.,
2006), and heavily impacting rural communities.
These rapid economic and social changes resulting from modernization can be
linked to increases in suicides in both the developed and the developing worlds. For
instance, despite economic growth and prosperity, sudden growth and the resulting
instability can increase vulnerability among individuals. This was noted in Russia during
the construction of socialism and during the development of capitalism in Europe in the
1800’s (Pradhan, et al., 2010). Patel (2007) noted that “the rising tide of suicides and
premature mortality in some countries, as seen in the alcohol-related deaths of men in
Eastern Europe, the suicides of farmers and weavers in India… and the suicide of young
women in rural areas in China, can be at least partly linked to rapid economic and social
change” (Patel, 2007).
As noted earlier, individuals who live in rural areas have been found to be at
greater risk of committing suicide than individuals who live in urban areas. This may be
23
explained by the impact of economic development on migration patterns. Individuals
move from rural areas to urban centers in search of work, leaving behind less mobile
individuals who may be more vulnerable to mental health issues. This migration pattern
has been associated with an increased risk of suicide of those remaining in the rural areas,
perhaps due to poverty, dilution of social support, isolation, and as mentioned previously,
access to pesticides (Vijayakumar et al., 2008; World Health Organization, 2008b).
Increased economic polarization between rural and urban areas often comes alongside
economic development, as urban areas reap the benefits of development while rural areas
are left behind (World Health Organization, 2008b). In contrast to studies that show
poorer mental health due to modernization among rural inhabitants, one study found
higher levels of psychiatric morbidity in rapidly developing urban areas in western Nepal
(Upadhyaya & Pol, 1998). The authors suggest this may be due to weak social structures
in the urban environment.
While there is a dearth of research exploring the relationship between
modernization and mental health/suicide throughout Asia, some limited research has been
conducted in China, which may serve as an example for the region. A common
explanation for the high suicide rate found in China is that modernization and rapid
economic change have had detrimental effects on society and infrastructure, leading to
increased suicide rates. Many factors related to modernization have been implicated in
the related high suicide rate, including the “wholesale failure of state-owned companies,
massive urbanization by migrant workers, the related breakage and uprooting of rural
families, deterioration of family relational networks, intense competition for economic
survival, surging divorce rates, resurgence of substance addictions and abuses,
24
destructive forces related to gambling and prostitution, marketization of the health care
system, sky-rocketing health care costs, and an increasing gap between the rich and poor”
(Law & Liu, 2008). While these issues may not be as pervasive in other Asian countries,
many are emerging as relevant matters throughout the region, particularly in Nepal.
Although working practices have changed rapidly with modernization and the
expansion of urban areas, more “ rigid social and familial practices” are not changing at
the same pace (Pradhan, et al., 2010). For instance, women’s traditional domestic roles
have not evolved at the same pace as the male workforce and economic development. A
study conducted in Taiwan found that while an increasing proportion of Taiwanese
women work outside of the home, there has been little change in the gender-based
expectations of domestic responsibilities, including childcare (Yeh, Xirasagar, Liu, Li, &
Lin, 2008). In traditional societies experiencing transition, women are expected to
preserve family and religious traditions in the face of modernization and increased
expectations to fulfill roles.
For women who work outside of the home, the combined stresses of managing
their household responsibilities with their employment responsibilities may impose
considerable psychological and time management stress. For those who remain in the
home, the loss of their husband’s contribution to household duties may create more
stress, which “may interact with cyclical, hormonal mood changes to cause greater
suicide propensity relative to the never married and widowed” (Yeh, et al., 2008).
A dramatic increase in alcohol abuse among men has been another unfortunate
byproduct of modernization in Asia (Patel, 2007). Husband’s alcohol abuse has been
shown to increase women’s vulnerability to mental health problems (Kohrt, et al., 2009).
25
It has even been suggested that the increase in female suicides in developing countries is
largely affected by husband’s alcohol and substance abuse, which may lead to domestic
violence. Koenig et al, in a study conducted in Uganda, found that women whose partners
drink alcohol on a regular basis are at four times the risk of physical and sexual violence
than those women whose partners do not consume alcohol (M. Koenig et al., 2004).
The mental health and suicide profile of LMIC and in particular, Asia, provide a
framework in which to approach the current mental health/suicide situation in Nepal.
Many of the issues seen elsewhere in Asia are emerging in Nepal and the mental health
situation is in need of increased attention and resources.
Mental Health and Suicide in Nepal
Today, more than 6 million Nepalese - 20% of the total population - have
symptoms of mental health disorders (IRIN News, 2010a). Of particular concern is the
rise of suicide in Nepali society, particularly amongst women. In less than 10 months in
2010, Nepali police recorded 7,300 cases of suicide (IRIN News, 2010b). More than half
of these were women. While the mental health situation in Nepal appears to be in urgent
need of redress, as in many other parts of the world, mental health needs have been
largely neglected, underreported and underfunded. In an article discussing the mental
health system in Nepal, Ram Lal Shreshtha, the director of the Centre for Mental Health
and Counseling-Nepal (CMC), stated that the current state of mental health “is a major
public health concern and we still do not have a proper mental health care system in
place…mental health issues have to be addressed urgently or a lot of lives will be at
stake” (IRIN News, 2010a). His statements come 15 years after the government first
26
formulated its mental health policy in 1996, with little subsequent implementation.
The government of Nepal allocates less than 3% of its national budget to the
health sector and only about 1% of the health budget is allocated to mental health
(Regmi, Pokharei, Ojha, Pradhan, & Chapagain, 2004). As a result, there is a dearth of
nationally representative, reliable, and systematic data on mental health and suicide in
Nepal, particularly amongst women. In particular, poor registration systems, legal issues,
and cultural beliefs and attitudes toward suicide have led to underreporting and possible
misclassification of deaths by suicide. In Nepal, family members of an individual who
has completed suicide may be fined and an individual who survives a suicide attempt
may be incarcerated. This inhibits many family members from reporting attempted or
completed suicides. Therefore, similar to other countries in Asia, there are most likely
considerable differences between actual suicide rates and suicide rates collected through
independent research and the rates collected by government authorities.
However, two groundbreaking reports, published in 1998 and 2008/2009,
employed scientifically rigorous methods to shed light on the growing suicide rate
amongst women in Nepal. The Nepal Maternal Mortality and Morbidity (MMM) Study
1998 was based on a prospective surveillance system that identified all deaths of women
of reproductive age across three districts of Nepal over one year. The Nepal MMM
Study 2008/2009 (Suvedi et al., 2009) used a similar prospective surveillance system and
looked at all deaths of women aged 10-50 years across eight districts of Nepal over a oneyear period.
Preliminary findings from the MMM Study 2008/2009 found that suicide was the
leading cause of death amongst women of reproductive age (15-49) in Nepal, with the
27
largest suicide rate found amongst women aged 15-24 (between 43% and 60%). While in
1998 suicide accounted for 10% for all deaths of women of reproductive age, in
2008/2009 16% of all deaths among women of reproductive age were attributable to
suicide (Suvedi, et al., 2009). Findings from another study conducted in Western Nepal
showed that two thirds of suicide cases were found to be female (Subba et al., 2009).
As mentioned previously, there is a strong association between suicide and mental
health disorders (Lamichhane, 2010). Of particular interest to the situation in Nepal are
findings that suggest that the link between mental health disorders and suicide may be
stronger in females than in males (Qin, et al., 2000; World Health Organization, 2008a).
A survey conducted in Nepal found that women had a higher psychiatric morbidity than
men, with a sex ratio up to 2.8:1 (Wright, Nepal, & Bruce Jones, 1989).
Many of the factors discussed that may predispose a woman to mental health
disorders or suicidal behavior are related to the status and treatment of women in Nepal.
Although Nepal is signatory to all of the international conventions relating to the rights of
women, including the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination
against Women (Niaz, 2003; Rule of Law in Armed Conflicts Project, 2011), the reality
for women within the country is in sharp contrast to the standards established in the
conventions (Niaz, 2003). Women are commonly denied education, choice in marriage,
economic independence, and reproductive independence, making them dependent upon
their husbands for economic subsistence. Women’s activities, such as taking care of their
farms or doing home chores, are not considered to have any economic value, giving men
full economic power in the relationship.
28
The denial of basic rights and freedoms to women in Nepal “increas[es] their
vulnerability to violence, injury and suicide” (Pradhan, et al., 2010). Arranged marriage,
which is highly prevalent throughout Nepal, has been shown to be related to gender based
violence (Pradhan, et al., 2010). The Nepal Demographic and Health Survey (NDHS)
2006 found that over 20% of both men and women found wife beating acceptable under
certain circumstances (USAID, New ERA, & Ministry of Health and Population, 2006).
Once married, relationship difficulties have been shown to increase a women’s
vulnerability to mental health disorders and suicide. For instance, similar to findings
elsewhere in Asia, husband’s alcohol consumption, which often leads to domestic
violence, has been shown to make women more vulnerable to mental health disorders
(Kohrt, et al., 2009). A study conducted in Nepal found that among young married men
and women, husband’s use of alcohol was the most commonly mentioned factor related
to domestic abuse (Puri, Shah, & Tamang, 2010). Husbands were noted as the
“predominant contributor” to female suicides (35% of cases) in verbal autopsies
conducted for the MMM 2008/2009, with unhappy marriages mentioned in 24% of
suicide cases (Pradhan, et al., 2010). While these numbers are staggering, they are likely
underestimates, given that the husband was most often the respondent in the verbal
autopsy. !
Domestic violence by families is “rampant in Nepal” (Dhakal, 2008), comprising
about 80% of the total violence perpetrated against women. The actual prevalence of
domestic violence is unknown as the majority of cases go unreported. Although other
forms of “conflict related trauma,” such as rape and displacement, have shown reductions
in recent years, the incidence of domestic violence continues to grow (Dhakal, 2008).
29
The risk factors associated with suicide in Nepal appear to be similar to risk
factors seen elsewhere in LMIC and Asia. For instance, the MMM 2008/2009 found that
pesticide poisoning was the most common method of suicide (Pradhan, et al., 2010),
reflecting findings from other LMIC that access to pesticides may increase suicidal risk.
The intensive surveillance system used in the MMM 2008/2009 has shown to be
particularly effective at identifying deaths through pesticide ingestion. One study
conducted in South Africa compared results from a similar surveillance system to the
routine data collected by local authorities and found that local authorities missed 90% of
pesticide poisoning cases (London & Bailie, 2001). Resembling findings from other
Asian countries, the MMM Study 2008/2009 found that many women who ingested
pesticides did so to threaten their husbands and families and often did not fully
understand the lethality of their actions. Emergency hospital records from the Nepali city
of Pokhara support the MMM 2008/2009 pesticide poisoning findings, with 92% of
women brought in for attempted suicide having ingested pesticides (Subba, et al., 2009).
Reflective of the socioeconomic factors that played a role in female suicides
elsewhere, the MMM Study 2008/2009 found that 44% of suicide victims of reproductive
age had received no schooling or were illiterate (Pradhan, et al., 2010). Interestingly, the
End Violence Against Women (EVAW) Baseline Study (2010) reported evidence to the
contrary, revealing that the highest percentage of suicides among education groups was
among those who had attained the school-leaving certificate (SLC), the highest
educational achievement within the survey (Pradhan, et al., 2010). Illiterate respondents
were the second highest represented group. Therefore, the data regarding the links
between education and suicide are still unknown in the Nepali context.
30
The role of marriage in society is also likely a significant factor in suicidal
behavior amongst women in Nepal. Forced, captured marriage, and arranged marriages
are commonplace in Nepal, especially in rural locales and there is high societal pressure
to remain married, even if in an abusive relationship. However, unlike trends found
elsewhere in Asia, suicide accounted for a higher proportion of deaths among unmarried
women (25%) in Nepal than for married women (15%) (Pradhan, et al., 2010).
There is a paucity of research exploring the relationship between modernization
and mental health/suicide in Nepal. While nearby countries may serve as an example of
the effects of modernization on mental health/suicide, Nepal has not undergone the same
extent of modernization as other Asian countries with increasing suicide rates. In these
countries, the extreme socio-cultural changes brought on by changes in the political and
economic systems have left unstable communities in transition and have disrupted
traditional society (Kim & Singh, 2004; Pradhan, et al., 2010). Nepal is similar to these
countries to an extent. While working practices have changed rapidly with
modernization and the expansion of urban areas in Nepal, more “rigid social and familial
practices” have not changed at the same pace (Pradhan, et al., 2010; Yeh, et al., 2008).
This leaves women particularly vulnerable and unable to progress in society.
Additionally, Nepal has experienced increases in alcohol usage among men, reflective of
trends resulting from modernization. This increase has been shown to be directly related
to domestic violence, leaving women at risk for developing mental health disorders or
contemplating suicide.
Although there are some similarities with other Asian countries, Nepal has been
significantly slower in its modernization process than neighboring countries. Its growth
31
rate of 4.6% (Indexmundi, 2010b) has been significantly slower than most other Asian
countries with high suicide rates, in particular compared to neighboring India, with a
growth rate of 10.4% (Indexmundi, 2010a). Moreover, Nepal’s growth trajectory is fairly
uncertain, with times of economic growth followed by political disruption and economic
downturns (Pradhan, et al., 2010). Therefore, unlike the extreme shifts of modernization
experienced by neighboring countries, Nepal’s modernization has largely been limited to
urban areas. The country has yet to undergo the same type of massive upheaval seen
elsewhere which has affected suicide trends.
Current Study
Little is known about how specific factors interact to contribute to mental health
issues and suicide amongst women in Nepal. Previous research has explored the role of
caste, child marriage, social supports, marital relationships (Kohrt et al., 2005; Kohrt, et
al., 2009; Kohrt & Worthman, 2009), and child soldiering (Kohrt et al., 2008) in female
depression and anxiety in Nepal. Research has also explored the roles of pesticide
poisoning and rurality in female suicides in Nepal. However, this research needs to be
reexamined in light of recent studies exposing the high incidence of suicide amongst
women in Nepal. In order to inform the development of a suicide prevention program,
more research is needed to understand the factors related to suicide and depression, as
well as attitudes toward and perceptions of suicide. Additional research is also needed to
determine the association between modernization and mental health states.
Much of the Nepal mental health and suicide research was conducted in Jumla, a
remote village in Nepal. In Jumla, women have almost twice the prevalence of mental
32
health problems compared to men (Kohrt, 2007). Given the high associated morbidity
and burden of disease related to mental health issues as well as the relative lack of mental
health infrastructure and services available for the community, it is vital to get a better
understanding of the processes at hand and what interventions may prove successful. The
current study attempts to fill the gaps in the literature and address mental health in light
of the latest research findings.
33
Chapter 3: Methods
This study was conducted to assess the state of mental health amongst women
within Jumla, Nepal, in the mid-western region of the country, as an extension of a
longitudinal, quantitative study with data points from 2000 (pre-war) and 2007 (postwar). Although both qualitative and quantitative data was collected in 2011, only the
qualitative will be analyzed for the purposes of this paper. Background on the
foundational studies conducted in 2000 and 2007 provide a basis on which to understand
the current study.
2000 Study
In 2000, the Department of Psychiatry at Tribhuvan University Teaching
Hospital/Institute of Medicine in Kathmandu granted approval for the initial study to be
conducted. In this study, Kohrt et al (Kohrt, et al., 2005) conducted a community
epidemiology study evaluating the relationship between culture and somatization, case
differences in mental health, and gender differences in mental health (Kohrt & Schreiber,
1999). Participants were recruited through random sampling of one adult per household,
with an nth sampling strategy, stratifying for age and gender. All participants were 18
years of age or older and provided consent with a signature or thumbprints if illiterate.
No compensation was provided for participants in the study.
2007 Study
For the follow-up study in 2007, the Emory University Institutional Review Board
in Atlanta, GA as well as the Nepal Health Research Council approved the study
34
protocol, with modifications approved by Tribhuvan University Teaching
Hospital/Institute of Medicine in Kathmandu. In this study, Kohrt et al. evaluated case
and gender differences in mental health following the Nepal Civil War. They used a
census based sampling methodology. The researchers drew maps of each of the
communities and based on the census used an nth sampling strategy, stratifying for age to
attain a distribution similar to the community gender and age breakdown. Additionally,
sampling took into account the subjects who participated in the 2000 study. An attempt
was made to contact and resurvey every participant from 2000 in each community while
surveying additional individuals (based on the methodology mentioned above) to
represent 10% of community size. Any household that participated in the 2000 study was
marked so that when new participants were added in 2007 those houses were skipped in
the nth household sampling to ensure that no household participated twice.
Current Study (2011)
For the study conducted in 2011, the Emory University Institutional Review
Board in Atlanta, GA approved the study protocol. The IRB approval number for this
study is IRB00050725.
Sample Population
The study took place in Jumla, Nepal, which is the district and zonal headquarters
of the Karnali District. Jumla is in the mid-western mountainous region of Nepal, where
the Nepali language originated. The population of Jumla is estimated to be around 69,226
people (Nepal is currently undergoing a census for 2011 and therefore, population
35
estimates are based on 2001 data) (HMG-CBS, 2003). Transportation in and out of Jumla
is restricted to plane and foot. Although a road now connects Jumla with other villages,
this road is restricted to tractors and trucks as it is not fully paved and operational.
Additionally, during monsoon season, this road often becomes dangerous and
impassable. Jumla has one hospital, which currently employs 4 doctors, nine health
posts, and 20 sub-health posts (Kohrt & Worthman, 2009).
In the current study, researchers resurveyed a sub-sample from the population
surveyed in 2000 and 2007 and conducted in-depth-interviews with a sample of these
women. Participants were recruited from the district headquarters and surrounding
villages. While the quantitative sampling will be outlined, more focus will be placed on
the qualitative sampling methodology for the purposes of this paper.
Quantitative Sampling
Sampling requirements included participation in the 2000 and 2007 surveys. All
other sampling requirements were met through participation in the 2000 and 2007
surveys (i.e. minimum and maximum age requirements). In total, 131 women participated
in both the studies conducted in 2000 and 2007. For the 2011 study, the research team
chose 100 women to resurvey, based on location and availability. Due to economic and
time restraints connected with the survey, women located more than 10 miles away were
not resurveyed.
36
Qualitative Sampling
Seven interview participants were chosen based on their Beck Depression
Inventory (BDI) scores from 2007 and 2011. Participants were selected because of a
marked increase or decrease of 10 or more points on the BDI since 2007. This sampling
frame was used to draw from women with a variety of experiences and mental health
outcomes. Four women had scores that increased since 2007 and 3 women had scores
that decreased over the time period. Participants also had to be between the ages of 2260.
In addition to the seven participants interviewed by the investigator, a coinvestigator for a co-occurring study interviewed 5 additional women on similar mental
health related topics. The co-investigator also included portions from the primary study
interview guide related to suicide and general mental health. This co-occurring study
used similar sampling methodology (BDI increase over time vs. BDI decrease over time
and participation in 2000 and 2007 surveys) as well as the same translator as the primary
study. Three women in this sample had increasing BDI scores over time (2000, 2007,
and 2011) and two women had decreasing BDI scores over time. Women in the cooccurring study were between the ages of 33-48. Supplemental interviews were added in
analysis to get a deeper sense of the concepts underlying suicide in Jumla, an
understudied topic.
37
Research Design
Quantitative Research
As stated earlier, this study was part of a larger longitudinal study with data points
in 2000 and 2007. The Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) was used to assess depression.
Qualitative Research
Seven women were chosen from the survey sample to be interviewed based on
their BDI scores from 2007 and 2011. Sampling occurred a quarter of the way through
completing the quantitative questionnaires due to time constraints. Five additional indepth-interviews were included from a co-occurring study for analysis of suicidal
attitudes and beliefs.
Procedures
Quantitative Research
Two research assistants fluent in Nepali conducted the surveys. The primary
investigator supervised the first 20 surveys to ensure that the research assistants adhered
to proper survey methodology and ethical requirements of the study. After collecting 10
surveys, the research team reviewed the research methodology and ethical requirements.
At this point, the research assistants asked any outstanding questions related to the survey
and clarified their roles as research assistants. An additional 10 surveys were then
collected with supervision from the primary investigator.
If possible, respondents were informed in advance that a research assistant would
be coming to conduct a survey. If this was not possible, the research assistant
38
approached the respondent, asking her if she would be willing to complete the survey at
that point in time or if there was a better time to return and complete the survey. In most
cases, the respondent agreed to participate on the spot.
Before conducting the survey, the research assistant asked to sit in a quiet place
with minimal distractions. Often times, this was the rooftop of the woman’s house. Once
settled, the research assistant introduced the primary goals of the study, explained the
documents detailing informed consent, and if the primary investigator was also present,
introduced the primary investigator as well. All participants were over the age of 18 and
provided consent with a signature or thumbprints if illiterate.
Qualitative Research
Once informed consent was granted, the research assistant requested that the
interview be tape recorded, explaining that the purpose of the recording was for
transcription only and would only be heard by the research assistant, the primary
investigator, and others involved in the study. All women agreed to the use of audio
recording. At the close of the interview, each interviewee received a small gift for her
participation (a small brush, a few bangles, and a packet of tikas). They were also
provided with information on how to access local counseling resources.
Quantitative Instrument: Beck Depression Inventory
The Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) was used to assess depressive
symptomology within the sample. There are 21 items on the BDI, each item scored 03,with 3 indicating high depressive symptomology. There is an instrument range of 0-62.
39
For the purposes of this study, researchers used a depression cutoff of 17 and above to
indicate borderline clinical depression to severe depression and a cut-off of 20 to indicate
presence of moderate to severe depression with the need for mental health intervention.
Higher total scores indicate more severe depressive symptoms.
The BDI was validated for use in Nepal (Kohrt, Kunz, Koirala, Sharma, & Nepal,
2002). Based on validation, the BDI cut-off of 20 was established to reflect symptom
burden at the level requiring intervention and, therefore, the cut-off used within this study
does not reflect DSM-IV diagnoses of major depression disorder (MDD).
Limitations and delimitations
All women in the 2011 study also participated in the studies conducted in 2000
and 2007. For the study conducted in 2000 there was a minimal age requirement of 18,
leaving the youngest woman in the 2007 sample at 26 years of age. Therefore, the 2011
survey and interviews were unable to capture younger women. Additionally, perhaps due
to the age requirements in 2000, all women in the 2011 sample were married, divorced or
widowed. There were no “never married” participants in the 2011 study. Both of these
demographic variables limit the generalizability of the findings.
Due to funding limitations, all survey respondents had to reside within 10 miles of
the Jumla District headquarters. Therefore, individuals who had relocated to other
districts or were originally located outside of the Jumla District were not included in
sampling. This may limit the scope of the study to less mobile individuals or individuals
only surrounding the Jumla district headquarters.
40
Plans for Data Analysis
Quantitative
Data was entered into an Excel spreadsheet by the primary investigator and a
research assistant in Kathmandu, Nepal. The spreadsheet was then inputted into SAS
Version 9.3 for analysis. Descriptive statistics were computed.
Qualitative
All audio recordings were simultaneously translated into English and transcribed
by a research assistant fluent in both English and Nepali. Qualitative principles of
grounded theory were employed for analysis. Transcriptions were then de-identified,
imported and analyzed using MAXQDA Version 10. All data were coded and then
analyzed, using description and comparison techniques.
41
Chapter 3: Results
Case Studies of Suicidal Ideation
Suicidal ideation refers to thoughts about taking one’s own life, with or without
some degree of intent. Several women in the sample expressed suicidal ideation. Their
stories and experiences reflect accounts commonly heard within the community and shed
light on how a combination of economic factors, domestic strife, alcoholism, and mental
health issues can lead to the desire to chose death over life. The lives and stories of two
women in particular, D.D.M. and N.M., help elucidate the situation of women in Jumla
and the rise of suicide within the population.
D.D.M., age 27, married
D.D.M. is a 27-year-old Brahmin woman who lives in a mountainous village in
Jumla. Her house is small and cramped, surrounded by piles of mud that accumulated
during the rainy season. Her skin, smudged with dirt from working on her farm, shows
signs of early sun damage and her long dark hair is tied back loosely. Hung along
bedroom walls are small, colorful posters of Hindu gods and goddesses as well as a
cartoon depiction of a luxurious Western style house and car. D.D.M. is a shy woman
who speaks softly and succinctly.
D.D.M. had a love marriage six years ago and claims that her “life was better
when [she] was not married.” Her family was upset that she got married so young,
wishing that she would have waited and completed her studies first. Although D.D.M.
went on to receive a higher degree as a community health worker, she has been unable to
find work in her profession and rather, does manual labor to support her family. Her
42
husband is unemployed. Her land produces food for less than 3 months a year and she
does not own any livestock. She does not own a television, telephone, or other modern
electronic devises.
Her first pregnancy at age 16 resulted in a miscarriage and D.D.M. said that at the
time, she was scared of dying from the experience. After her first son was born when she
was 19 years old, her husband had a vasectomy to prevent further pregnancies. While she
said that they received resistance from family members for this decision, she felt that this
was a decision that had to be made between herself and her husband, without outside
input.
Following the birth of her son, D.D.M. was allowed 30 days rest and then went
back to work doing manual labor on her farm. She noted that because her “husband is an
addict” he did not care about her fragile, post-partum physical condition. D.D.M.
described her condition one month after childbirth: “I was so weak that my body couldn’t
produce enough milk to feed the child. I felt sad and irritated when the child cried. I had a
lot of burden.”!Without the help of her husband, she was left to care for her child, farm
and perform home chores alone.
In recent years, she has had numerous health problems, citing a blocked tear duct
as her primary concern. Because of the blocked duct, she says that she feels dizzy all of
the time and often must rest in the middle of the day. Although there is a surgery to fix
the problem, she cannot afford the procedure.
D.D.M. emphasized how domestic strife has highly impacted her. Her husband is
addicted to both alcohol and tobacco and she said that when he drinks, he “scolds her”
saying that she is “a useless woman.” Her husband’s verbal abuse when intoxicated has
43
increased due to her health issues. She explained: “He has been drinking a lot. I have a
sick eye. He says this woman is sick and he regrets getting married to me. He drinks
alcohol and fights with me. I am sick. What can I do about it?”
D.D.M. said that she often feels like she cannot handle her life situation. She
expressed specific anxieties related to her deteriorating health, feeding her child, and
providing him with an education. She said, “I feel like crying at my situation. I often
wonder what has happened to me. I wonder why I was born. I feel anxious about what’s
happened to me. I feel nauseous all the time.” She expressed concern that, like so many
others in her community, she will die of suicide. However, while she expressed such
worry, she also felt that death would bring a sense of relief: “I often worry that I will die
similarly. Sometimes I have such thoughts. I do not have a source of income. I often
think about how will I feed my child and educate him. How will I survive? I often feel
that it would be a relief if I could die like that.”
D.D.M.’s story highlights how economic problems, health problems, and
domestic strife have led her to suicidal ideation. Unlike other women in the sample who
noted their children as their source of strength, D.D.M. did not mention her child as a
suicide preventative factor.
N.M., age 35, married
N.M. is a 35-year-old Brahmin woman. She lives in a spacious multi-bedroom
house that includes a storeroom, a sizeable porch, and a well-equipped kitchen. N.M. is a
generous, friendly woman whose wrinkled skin makes her look years older than her true
age. However, her dark hair exposes her youth. She dresses in typical Nepali garb,
covering her head at all times with a blanket and wearing colorful beads to dress up.
44
N.M. never went to school but has recently completed an adult education class. She said
that when she was young, she “wanted to get education but no one was willing to educate”
her. She feels that lack of education has been the primarily limiting factor in her life.
N.M. does manual labor for her living and is especially proud of her farm plot.
Her land produces between 3 to 6 months of produce per year and she sells excess
produce in the town market. Her family also owns 8 livestock, including chickens and
cows. Her husband is unemployed and she says he spends most of his time hanging out in
the bazaar (local market). He “is not very educated” and is only “literate enough to write
letters.”
N.M. had an arranged marriage when she was 15 years old and has three children
– two boys and one girl. N.M. had her first child at the age of 16 at which point she said
she was scared of dying. A few years into her marriage, her husband took her sister as a
second wife. Since that point, N.M. said that her life has been difficult and her marriage
unhappy. Before the second marriage, she felt that her husband loved her but since he
married another woman she feels “like he doesn’t love [her] anymore”. Her husband is
physically and emotionally abusive, often coming home drunk and angry. She pointed to
a problem in her inner ear that has left her partially deaf. She believes being hit in the
side of her head by her husband caused this.
N.M. said that she feels sad all the time. Although she works tirelessly on the
farm and in the home, she feels like she cannot complete her work. She expressed
specific sadness and anxiety over the potential inability to educate her children. N.M.
feels that her level of suffering exceeds the normal suffering experienced by women in
Jumla. She explained: “There are women who suffer but they have relief in one way or
45
other but I have suffered in every way. My husband doesn’t even have a job. He quarrels
with me all the time.” She feels that without relief from her husband, all other concerns
cannot be ameliorated.
N.M. expressed concerns over her physical and mental well-being. She said that
she “fear[s] something [bad] will happen” to her. For instance, “sometimes [she] feel[s]
like something has moved in [her] head.” Doctors have found no evidence of a physical
problem, indicating possible psychosomatic issues. Additionally, N.M. expressed explicit
suicidal ideation. She shared her thoughts: “Once in a while I feel like jumping in the
river or poisoning myself.” Although N.M. expressed suicidal ideation several times in
the course of the interview, she said that thinking about her children’s wellbeing prevents
her from committing suicide. She has also thought about running away from her husband
but feels that she cannot leave her children alone. She said: “I look at my children. I
cannot run away because I have children. I cannot die because there won’t be anyone to
look after my children.”
N.M.’s situation highlights how mental health issues bisect economic and social
classes. In particular, domestic abuse, her husband’s alcoholism, and her husband’s
unemployment have caused exceptional mental stress, leading to suicidal ideation.
These two case studies touch on numerous issues that Jumla women face on a
daily basis. They are only two examples that illuminate how mental health issues,
economics, education, domestic issues, differential gender impacts and suicide affect
women in Nepal, and in particular, in Jumla. The compounding of these issues could
lead to suicidal ideation and eventual suicidal attempts and completion. While the case
46
studies only describe the lives of two women, their stories reflect the broader experience
of women in the community. Through an understanding of these themes, one can begin to
concentrate on mental health programming aimed at improving well-being and reducing
female suicides in Nepal.
In-Depth Interviews
In the in-depth-interviews, women were asked about their general mental well
being, their daily lives, and their attitudes toward suicide. Six dominant themes emerged
from the interviews: 1) mental health issues; 2) economics; 3) education; 4) domestic
issues; 5) differential gender impacts; and 6) suicide.
Table 1. Main and sub-themes identified in in-depth interviews
Main Theme
Sub-themes
Mental health issues
Depression/sadness
Anxiety/worry
Economics
-Education
-Domestic issues
Domestic strife and alcohol abuse
Love vs. arranged/captured marriage
Differential gender impacts
Personal attitudes and community response
toward child gender
Male vs. female work balance
Suicide
Reasons for committing suicide
Impulsivity in suicide
Speculation of family involvement in
suicide
Reactions toward suicide
47
Children
BAI Score
2011*
BDI Score
2000**
BDI Score
2007**
BDI Score
2011**
20
24
36
15
11
11
20
27
17
12
6
32
M
41
10
28
35
M
11
21
19
14
33
24
32
29
M
3 (1 S;
2 D)
29
8
8
25
M
3 (2 S;
1 D)
3 (2 S;
1 D)
41
21
30
41
29
32
21
19
M
6 (D)
35
26
29
34
--
Brahman No
schooling
Dalit
Adult
literacy
class
Brahman Adult
literacy
class
Dalit
No
schooling
Brahman Adult
literacy
class
Brahman No
schooling
Brahman Secondary
6 (4 S;
2 D)
5 (2 S;
3 D)
2 (S)
M
3 (S)
30
15
21
26
47
Brahman Primary
M
2 (D)
30
22
14
13
26
33
27
A.B.D.
58
A.C.D.
43
S.R.K.
44
D.B.
42
S.U.
40
N.M.
35
A.B.K.
48
N.B.
N.B.M.
Education
Level
2 (S)
2 (S)
1 (S)
M.A.
K.R.
D.D.M.
Caste
M
M
M
Age
Chetri
S.L.C
Chetri
S.L.C
Brahman I.A. or
above
Brahman Secondary
Initials
Marital
Status
Table 2. Characteristics of Women in Case Studies/In-depth Interviews
M
M
SLC = School Leaving Certificate (high school level)
IA = Proficiency Certificate (college level)
M = married
S = son; D= daughter
*Score of 17 and above indicates moderate to severe anxiety
** Score of 20 and above indicates presence of moderate to severe depression
48
1) Mental Health Issues
The theme “mental health issues” applies to references toward mental health
states, with two main states mentioned most frequently: a) depression/sadness and b)
anxiety/worries. In Nepal, emotions are expressed in terms of how things affect the
“heart-mind”. For instance, if an interviewer wanted to know what makes a woman sad,
he would ask, “What makes your heart-mind feel bad.” This concept conveys the holistic
approach through which Nepali view mental health.
a) Depression/sadness
Throughout the interviews, women commonly referenced experiences and
situations that made them sad. While women did not use the term “depression” to address
their sadness, many women discussed a prolonged sense of sadness (“I feel sad all the
time”) and general malaise accompanied by feelings of hopelessness and inadequacy.
Therefore, the term “depression” is used in conjunction with “sadness” to emphasize that
many women discussed sadness in terms of a chronic mental state.
Sadness was discussed in reference to a variety of situations. Some women noted
a general sense of sadness, unrelated to a specific event or factor. For instance, A.B.K., a
48-year-old woman, explained how she experiences sadness: “I have pain in my heartmind but who will take the pain away. There is no one to give or take pain. I have to
console my heart-mind whenever it is in pain.” While women often conveyed a general
sense of sadness, three particular situations overwhelmingly were referenced in terms of
their ability to induce sadness: economic conditions, inability to acquire/provide
education, and marriage.
49
When discussing the biggest burden in their lives, all women addressed their
economic situations. They referenced their economic situations as “their biggest
problem” and “their biggest burden.” Many women said they would feel happier if their
businesses did well, indicating that they feel bad when their businesses fail to succeed.
One woman, who works as a farmer, said that she often worried about if her “business
would go to loss or [her] farm would be destroyed. Those thoughts made [her] feel bad”
(N.P., age unknown). In Jumla, women often serve as the sole provider of the family and
therefore, feel intense personal and familial pressure for their farms/businesses to
succeed.
A second source of sadness for the women was their inability to acquire education
and the inability to provide education for their children. The majority of the women
interviewed stopped school prematurely due to marriage, childbirth, or home
responsibilities. For many of these women, the inability to complete their schooling
served as a major source of sadness and societal restriction. N.B.M., age 47, quit school
upon completing primary school. She said that during her childhood “it was a big deal
even to study until 8th grade.” She explained further:
During those times girls were not sent to school. I adapted to what work I had to
do. I had studied a little so I felt like it was enough during those days. I thought if
I have to work anyways why don’t I just work [now].
Unlike N.B.M., who quit school to help out with chores, N.B. was forced to quit
school when she got pregnant: “I kept wondering why I had to stop. I felt sad about it. I
couldn’t continue after I had children. … I felt very bad.”
While the women often discussed their own inability to pursue education, they
also frequently expressed sadness over the inability, or potential inability, to provide their
50
children with education. When asked what makes her sad, N.M. said, “I feel sad when I
think that I might not be able to educate the children. I have suffered a lot but I want to
make them big people.” Many women expressed a similar sentiment.
Finally, women often referenced sadness when discussing the act of getting
married and their situations once married. For instance, N.B. had an arranged marriage.
When discussing how she felt when she got married, she said: “I felt bad that I was
having to go to other’s home. Who would feel good to leave one’s parents and go to
other’s home?” Most of the women interviewed referred to the sadness experienced when
leaving their maternal home upon marriage. These women were typically married
between the ages of 11-15 and therefore, left their homes during adolescence. The
emotional toll of this separation and unfamiliarity is something that remained with these
women over time – even when they could not remember other details of emotions
surrounding their weddings. In addition to the conditions under which women got
married, domestic issues post-marriage were often mentioned as sources of sadness. One
woman explained a situation in which her husband acquired a new wife - her sister:
I felt extremely sad when my husband brought home another wife. I felt like my
heart was broken into pieces. I felt extremely worried… I felt like my heart was
burning. I felt very sad. I do not know what mistake I did. I have had no peace in
my heart. (N.B., age unknown)
For this woman, her husband’s acquisition of a second wife has served as a constant
source of sadness for her over time. Other women reflected the notion that husbands only
serve as a source of sadness and trouble for their wives.
There were no noticeable differences in trends of sadness/depression between
women who have become more depressed over time vs. women who have become less
depressed over time (based on the Beck Depression Inventory [BDI]). In fact, even
51
women with decreasing BDI scores over time expressed increasing or static sadness
levels over time. One woman, whose BDI has decreased since 2007, said, “It is obvious
that the sadness will increase [over time]. There is no one to support me. If I had my
husband with me I would have at least someone to share during difficult times.” There
was a sense among all of the women that sadness was a fact of life that could not be
practically ameliorated in their current reality.
b) Anxiety/worry
“Anxiety/worry” emerged as a pervasive theme across almost all of the
interviews. It was expressed as feelings of nervousness and unease. Women were explicit
in describing their anxiety/worry and used the terms “worry” or “I was anxious” to
discuss an issue that caused a sense of worry or anxiety.
A theme that unified most of the interviews was a general worry for how to
provide for children (in terms of clothing, food, and education), tied to economic
uncertainty. For instance, one woman, age 27, commented: “My husband doesn’t have an
income and I do not earn either…How will I educate my child? How can I afford to buy
exercise book[s] and pencils for him?” Women generally expressed a sense of anxiety
over not earning enough to cover school expenses, with schooling for their children noted
as a priority.
Tied to economic issues, many women expressed worry over completing their
farming and household duties. N.M., a 35-year-old woman, reflected this sentiment:
My husband doesn’t help me at all. I do everything alone. Sometimes I feel very
anxious about when I would finish all the work that needs to be done. When I am
anxious I do not like eating… I have not seen anyone who suffered as much [as I
have].
52
N.M.’s anxieties are directly tied to her work burden and economics. With no income
generated by her husband, she is the sole provider for the family.
Another common concern among the women was over their health status and how
changes in health could result in an inability to care for their children, provide for their
families, or complete their work. D.D.M., a 58-year-old farmer, expressed worry over
how aging would impact her ability to complete her work:
I feel like as the time is passing, I am getting weaker, I get worried what I will do. I
feel like I am sad… I am weaker now. My blood and bone marrow is weak. I think I
won’t be able to do things much longer.
Another woman connected her health worries to her economic distress: “They say I have
to have an operation. But I didn’t have money for that. I am scared that I will die without
getting treatment and medicine. I feel worried about it.” This concern over the inability to
pay for medical care was universal amongst the women.
Finally, expressions of anxiety/worry commonly arose in the context of childbirth.
Women expressed worry about their own health during childbirth and the health of the
child. Although not a sentiment reflected by the other women, D.B., a 42-year-old
woman, expressed worry about the gender of her child. She said:
The community was also not happy [when I had a girl] and I also felt a bit sad. I
hoped that it would be a son. I worried what if I had a lot of daughters. I was worried
that I would have five or six daughters. Society wants you to have a boy. They want
to give birth until they have a son.
When comparing anxiety/worry across sub-grouping, some general trends
emerge. Women who have become more depressed over time talked about their
worries/anxieties significantly more than women who have become less depressed over
time. Interestingly, a woman in the decreasing depression group repeated that “there was
53
no use worrying” after she expressed concern over an issue whereas women in the
increasing depression group dwelled on their worries extensively in the interviews.
There were few differences in how women expressed anxiety/worry based on
their age cohort. While women below the age of 35 mostly expressed worry about raising
children and dying in childbirth, women above the age of 35 mostly expressed worry
about health issues and how that would affect their children. Additionally, the younger
women talked about anxiety/worry less than the older women. However, both groups
talked about economic concerns as a key issue.
2) Economics
As mentioned previously, economics serve as a major source of anxiety amongst
the women interviewed and serves as a primary focus within the community. The theme
“economics” refers to discussion of financial issues, employment as related to income
generation, and income in general.
N.B.M., who reported earnings of more than 8,000 rupees a month (the highest
income category possible), explains that, even for her, economic problems are universal
within Jumla. She says, “Everyone has problem because our village is poor. Everyone
faces problem even to buy salt and oil.” On the other end of the financial spectrum, S.U.
reported no monthly income. She explained her economic situation and the resulting
hardships:
No matter what I do there is never enough to eat. I feel sad. I cannot afford buying
exercise books to send my children to school. My son is studying in 12th standard.
I do not have enough money to pay for his admissions. If my husband had a job,
we would have kept money in the house. It would have been easier. How many
times would I ask for a loan? Even if I take a loan there is trouble paying it back.
All these things make me feel sad. I feel sad and my troubles increase.
54
Although S.U. knows of available financial assistance, she feels unable to manage
the financial responsibilities that would accompany a loan. Within Jumla, two women in
different villages reported their involvement in and the existence of loan societies created
specifically for women. N.B.M. explained how the loan societies function:
We collect 50 rupees each from every group member every month and deposit it
in the bank. Then we regulate the loan. We also take interest from the women. If
any woman needs financial support, they ask for help and we give them some part
of the deposit. When she returns it she has to return with interest… We regulate
that money and charge interest.
While all of the women discussed financial problems, none of the women, aside from the
two mentioned above, referred to the role of the loan societies in helping them cope with
their financial issues.
A variety of other issues were discussed in relation to economics. As previously
mentioned, many women discussed economic problems in relation to an inability to
address a medical condition, reporting that some women “have died because they didn’t
have any money to go for the treatment” (N.B., age unknown). S.K.U. explained that the
inability to pay for medical treatments is a ubiquitous problem. She said, “Everyone has
same problems here. We are all similar. My sister-in-law just died because she didn’t get
treatment for same kind of pain as me.” Another woman explained that after a child fell
sick, she was forced to sell her land to pay for his medical bills. When he eventually died
from his condition, they were left with nothing and her economic status plummeted.
For many, their economic situation is viewed as a hindrance toward upward
progress in society. A 47-year-old woman explained that she has been “barred [in
society] because [her] economic position is not strong” (N.B.M.). This economic/social
position holds much weight within Nepali society and determines one’s ability to seek
55
additional aid. A.B.K. explained that “those who have resources resolve the problem and
those who do not have resources cannot do anything. It is like that in society.”
There were no significant differences between women who earned more per
month and women who earned less. Even among women who earned the most per month
(more than 8,000 rupees per month), economic hardships were mentioned as the biggest
problems in their lives.
3) Education
This theme applies to references to formal education relating to personal
experiences, attitudes, or beliefs or relating to others' experiences, attitudes, or beliefs. As
previously noted, many women mentioned education in the context of regret toward not
receiving additional education, worry/desire to provide children with education, and the
relationship between economics and education.
The average level of education achieved by the women interviewed was lower
secondary schooling. For varying reasons (mentioned earlier), women chose to quit or
dropped out of school at an early age. Many “couldn’t continue after [they] had children”
or had to remain home to help with household labor. For instance, N.M., who did not
complete elementary school, explained why her family chose to keep her home rather
than send her to school and how she sought to defy their wishes:
I used to go to school sometimes when I was very small…I am only literate
enough to write my signature. During those times girls were not sent to school.
My maternal home had big farm…They made me work in the farm like plant the
rice and take grains to the water mill. But I was very interested in studying so I
went to school hiding from everyone. I wanted to study and move ahead…. I
wanted to get education but no one was willing to educate me.
For N.M., the only way to get an education was to attend school surreptitiously.
56
She emphasized that “girls were not sent to school”. In this society, education for boys
was more highly valued than education for girls and therefore, it was easier to sacrifice
female’s education for the needs of the family.
All of the women expressed the belief that had they received more education,
their current situation would be decidedly different. Lack of education was noted as a
“barrier” to moving up in society. N.B. explained, “There are people who are more
educated than me and they have higher status than me in the society. I am not as educated
as them so it is a barrier for me.” For N.B education would have meant that she
“wouldn’t have had to do labor work like this. [She] could have found a job.” Women
commonly mentioned that education would have allowed them to pursue employment
that did not involve physical, grueling labor. In this agrarian society, work outside of the
farm is considered more reputable. One woman explained that had she had the chance to
study, her life would not have been as hard. She believed that if she had received an
education, she “would have been a reputed person in the society... There is a difference
between a reputation of someone who works in the farm and someone who works in
office” (N.M., age 35).
However, several women mentioned that even with education, women in Jumla
would not be able to pursue the same opportunities that are available to men. K.J.
explained that “there are a lot of problems in Jumla…Women are not literate. Those who
study, they cannot get degree. Most of them cannot use their education for anything.”
A.B.D. echoed this sentiment saying that “[m]en are educated and they visit different
places. [Society] treat[s] men differently. Even if a woman is educated they treat her as
57
illiterate.” Amongst these women, there was a strong belief that even with more
education, the position of women in society was immutable.
For many, although hope for their own education and societal mobility was futile,
hope for their children’s futures was paramount and viewed as an ultimate goal. A.C.D.
said that she “only want[ed] [her] children to live and get good education”. She felt that
her “days have already passed” and she just “hope[s] that [her] children will study.” A
child’s ability to acquire and succeed in education was frequently noted as a source of
happiness (“I feel good when my children study well and are able to secure good marks”),
with one woman even noting that the happiest day of her life was when her son passed
his high school completion exams.
A common refrain was that the educational situation is better for children today,
girls in particular. Today, women expressed, “times have changed and [g]irls study and
make progress.” For the modern woman, “education is more valued.” D.B., explained
how things will be different for girls in modern society. “We were not given education”,
she explained, “but we have educated our daughters. I think life will be different for them.
They will not need to work as much as we did. They go to school and study. They do not
work as much as we work.” In this context, women refer to “work” as physical labor.
A.B.D., who completed secondary school, was able to educate her girl children.
She remarked how her children’s ability to pursue education has changed their
employment trajectory and their views on labor:
These children will not work. The land I have cultivated until now will remain
barren in their times. They are all educated and they do not like to work in the
farm. Who will work hard? There are lots of troubles in farming. We have to
work for six months to bring the water canal to our village. The products from our
farm are not worth the energy we invest in it.
!
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This was one of the few areas where the women expressed hope for the future and
believed in their capacity to create change for the future generation.
4) Domestic Issues
The theme “domestic issues” refers to issues relating to household affairs or the
family. Two sub-themes emerged under the theme “domestic issues”: 1) domestic strife
and alcohol abuse; and 2) love vs. arranged/captured marriages.
a) Domestic strife and alcohol abuse
The seemingly dissimilar sub-themes “domestic strife” and “alcohol abuse” were
combined into one sub-theme for the purposes of analysis because of their overwhelming
coexistence when women discussed domestic issues. Alcohol abuse was never mentioned
in isolation from domestic strife and most commonly, domestic strife was mentioned in
relation to alcohol abuse. Therefore, the two will be discussed side by side in this section.
The sub-theme “domestic strife” includes any mention of domestic quarrels,
disputes, or abuse as related to the self or others. This theme includes emotional abuse or
disputes as well as physical threats or abuse. It is important to remember that any member
of the family unit can perpetrate domestic violence, with violence in Nepal often
perpetrated by in-laws. Alcohol abuse refers to references toward alcohol use that “results
in harm to one’s health, interpersonal relationships or ability to work” (Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention, 2011b).
Women frequently and openly discussed the role of domestic strife in their lives.
For many of the women, domestic disputes and tensions were a fact of daily life – the
59
norm – with occasions of tranquility savored. For instance, N.B. noted that she feels good
when her husband “behaves well and there is no conflict at home.” For some women,
keeping their husbands away from the house was a mechanism to avoid domestic strife.
When asked about her husband’s employment far from home, B.D.A. explained that she
appreciated when he was away: “ I don’t want him home that often. He talks a lot. He
scolds me. It’s better he stays outside…He gives me derogatory remarks because I am
illiterate and he is highly literate.” In this case, B.D.A. explains how she enjoys when her
husband is away from home as well as how lack of female education often places women
in a subjugated position with little power.
Many women mentioned emotional abuse alongside instances of physical abuse.
One woman, in particular, spoke at length about the role of violence in her household.
She explained how her children and neighbors try to protect her from her husband’s
abuse; however, it continues nonetheless. She continued:
If neighbors know about the fight they come to help…Sometimes I run away
outside the home. I have hidden in other’s homes many times because of the fear
that my husband will beat me… [My husband] scorns me for no reason. He uses
derogatory words to scold me. Sometimes he beats me. (N.M., age 35)
While emotional violence was often mentioned in the context of verbal disputes,
it was also discussed in the context of a husband taking another wife. For instance, for
N.M., the emotional impact of her husband taking a second wife was emotionally harmful,
leading her to consider suicide. She explained that her husband “tormented [her] by
bringing a second wife.”
Although not often mentioned in the interviews, the role of in-laws in perpetrating
domestic violence was noted. For instance, one woman explained how her sister-in-law,
in addition to her husband, has caused her emotional distress. N.M. explained: “After I
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got married I was happy only for a year. After that I never knew happiness. My sister-inlaws troubled me a lot. My husband also troubled me. I have always suffered after a year
of marriage.” In a more extreme example, S.U. discussed the suicide of her sister. She
said that her sister “killed herself because she had problems with her father and motherin-law.” While S.U. did not outline what the exact “problems” were in the relationship
between her sister and her in-laws, other interviewees mentioned cases of in-laws
restricting a woman’s mobility, forcing her to work long hours, and requiring her to work
soon after childbirth. For instance, D.D.M. said that if she!!"#"$%&'()*+,'-./*0'1)&./*!
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The women repeatedly mentioned alcohol abuse in relation to their husbands. For
the most part, all references to alcohol were related to how alcohol leads to domestic
violence. K.R. explained that men “get married. Man drinks alcohol. He beats his wife
and they have conflict.” This cycle was noted as normal in Jumla society. S.U., a 40-yearold mother of three, explained how her husband’s alcohol abuse impacted her:
My husband drinks day and night. He cannot do without alcohol. … I feel
worried… I tell him [how it makes me feel] but he fights with me. He says “have
I drunk out of your father’s property?” Then I feel hurt and he beats me and I beat
him.
This was the only instance mentioned of a woman also harming her husband.
Domestic strife as related to alcoholism is not restricted to physical abuse. It
includes emotional and verbal abuse as well. S.R.K., a 44-year-old woman, explained:
“Yes, lives are hard for women. Men drink alcohol and come to scorn women. Women
have huge amounts of work to do. Men scold the women but it’s women who have to
work hard. “ Personal accounts of emotional abuse create a better picture of how alcohol
61
abuse relates to domestic abuse. For instance, one woman discussed how her husband’s
alcohol abuse led to his emotional violence:
I have been very affected. He drinks alcohols and comes to me. He scolds me
using whatever words he wants. He scolds the child and chases him away. He
doesn’t have a job and he doesn’t do anything. He just goes away to the bazaar
and hangs out. He says I am a useless woman. (D.D.M., age 27)
Another woman described the emotional toll caused by her husband’s alcohol abuse. After
experiencing multiple seizures, D.B. sought medical care to seek an explanation:
We went to see a doctor. The doctor told me that I have no problems. The doctor
also told my husband that your wife has no physical problem but you are her
problem. [The doctor] called my husband and told him not to drink because my
sickness was caused by his drinking habits.
According to her doctor, D.B.’s seizures were psychosomatic in origin with no medical
basis. Rather, the stress and worry caused by her husband’s drinking were manifesting as
physical impairment. While this was the only first hand testament of a conversion
disorder - a condition, often induced by stress or trauma, in which a person has negative
physical symptomology that cannot be explained by medical evaluation – local doctors
attested that they see many women in the local hospital who come with conversion
disorders.
There was a sense in the community that alcohol abuse was on the rise. R.K.
noted that alcoholism was a problem in the past but “not a problem like today”. She
believed that alcohol is more “available” now. Another woman explained that if men do
“not produce the alcohol here they bring it from somewhere else. If they do not bring it
they produce it here. There is no way to stop it” (D.B., age 42).
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b) Love vs. arranged/captured marriages
In Nepal, arranged marriage is incredibly common. An arranged marriage is a
marriage in which the parents of the bride and groom arrange the union and neither the
bride nor the groom has a say over the selection of a future spouse. A captured marriage
is a marriage in which the groom abducts the woman he wishes to marry. In many cases,
captured marriage occurs if the man is significantly older than the woman he wants to
marry. Finally, a love marriage is a marriage based on mutual agreement between the
bride and the groom. Among the women interviewed, three women had love marriages,
two women had captured marriages, and six women had arranged marriages. Although
there were differences in the methods by which the women got married, for the most part,
the women all spoke about marriage in a similar way.
While love marriages are more accepted in current Nepali society, previously
households and communities shunned women who partook in a love marriage. M.A., a
26-year-old woman who had a love marriage, explained how her family reacted to her
love marriage:
We had a love marriage… My maternal home didn’t let me in for four years.
They still don’t have a good attitude towards me. They were very upset that I
married at a very young age and dropped out of school and stopped studying.
They thought I will have to work a lot in Jumla. My maternal home tormented me
a lot…I was just fourteen complete fifteen… They took me back to my maternal
home once and said that it is wrong to let me get married at such a young age.
In this case, the family primarily disapproved of her marriage because she was leaving
her schooling early. Interestingly, D.D.M., who also had a love marriage, explained that
her family was upset with her for the same reason. They “scolded” her and got angry,
saying that she “still very young” and that she should “study first”. By leaving school
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early, women in Jumla limit their economic earning potential. While these reports show
family’s concern over daughters education and economic stability, more commonly heard
is that families disapprove of love marriage because it breaks from tradition and
undermines the authority of the family.
Although the women who partook in love marriages arranged their own unions,
they expressed similar worries and issues about marriage as women who had arranged or
captured marriages. For instance, D.D.M. explained that her husband is an alcoholic who
is emotionally abusive. Due to her health problems (a blocked tear duct), she says that he
“drinks alcohol… fights with [her]” and “regrets getting married to [her]”. M.A. also had
a love marriage. She says she got married out of “the excitement of being a teenager.”
When asked if she is happy she got married, she explained that she already has children
so she has to be happy – “there is no use being sad.” Although M.A. did not speak as
negatively as the other women who had love marriages, she still expressed a similar
dispassion for her marriage, as did other women.
Most of the women interviewed had some form of arranged marriage. When
asked about their experiences around the time of their weddings, most of the women felt
that it was difficult to recall memories and emotions from that time. Yet, A.B.D. a 58year-old woman vividly remembered how she felt on her wedding day: “Yes I remember.
I felt very bad that day. If I had a lover I would have married of my own choice. My
father and mother got me married away. My father- and mother-in-law asked for my hand
in marriage.” N.B.M. explained a similar process: “[I had] an arranged marriage. I was
still very young and my mind had not grown yet. My parents said they want to marry me
away. They said that a daughter has to go to others’ home anyway and I thought they are
64
right… Those were the days when you would feel bad. I felt bad too.”
While many women had difficulties recalling memories from their weddings, they
all shared a common recollection – the feeling of being taken from their mother’s house.
N.B. explained: “I felt bad that I was having to go to other’s home. Who would feel good
to leave one’s parents and go to other’s home?” This phrase, “who would feel good
leaving one’s mother’s home/one’s parents’ home” was repeated often amongst the
women. They all felt that they were “still very young” when they got married and
therefore, the act of leaving their maternal home was distressing. That is an emotion they
remember until today.
Women who had captured marriages explained similar feelings of sadness around
their marriages. A.C.D. was 13 when she got married. She explained that her in-laws
“neither asked for [her] hand in marriage nor was it a love marriage.” She said, “I was
stolen and brought here. They captured me and got me married.” D.B. also had a captured
marriage. She explained the process: “They enticed me and brought me here and got me
married to him. I was captured. They cajoled me and brought me here. Later they got me
married to my husband. I felt very scared.” These women expressed sadness about
leaving their maternal home, similar other women, with an added sense of fear
surrounding the wedding.
Although there are distinct differences in the methods by which the women were
married, there were no pronounced differences in how the women discussed marriage or
how they emotionally related to their marriages. While most of the women expressed
sadness and even hopelessness when discussing their marriages, many felt that times
were changing. Based on the women’s responses about their own children, in addition to
65
the marriage demographics of the younger women in the interview sample, there has been
a significant shift in marriage norms. Two thirds of the younger women in the interview
sample had love marriages compared to one love marriage amongst the sample of older
women (above the age of 35).
Many women expressed the belief that their own children should have the choice
over whom to marry, a significant shift from the norm. A.B.D., a 58-year old mother of
six, had an arranged marriage. When asked if she would have an arranged marriage for
her daughters, she responded:
Whatever they wish. I will do whatever they want. The tradition of arranging
marriage is no more. I do not know if they will send a man to ask their hand in
marriage or they will marry themselves.
A.B.D.’s response was typical amongst the women when asked about their children’s
marriages. N.M. said that in recent times “[m]any changes have occurred. People get
married to whoever they wish.” She explained that when people come to ask for her
daughter’s hand in marriage, she tells them that they will not arrange her marriage and
that her daughter “will get married to who she thinks is appropriate to her.” These
responses to changes in tradition also emphasize the important role of marriage in society,
where remaining unmarried is not an option. For A.B.D. and N.M., their daughters can
choose the method by which they want to get married; however, they cannot choose to
remain unmarried. This emphasis on marriage in society is reflected in the demographic
homogeneity in the sample of women interviewed. Every woman interviewed as part of
the larger study was married. However, marriage was not a requirement for eligibility in
the study.
Although arranged marriages are decreasing, it is still a widespread practice in
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Jumla. S.U.K. chose an arranged marriage for her 16-year-old son. She explained her
son’s response to the marriage: “He felt shy in the beginning but later he said why you
got me married, I was still studying. I wouldn’t have married until I was 20 or 25 years
old. He said we got him into a mess.” Although marriage norms are shifting, the change
has not been universally accepted.
The women interviewed discussed their marriages at length. They felt it was a
source of distress and sadness, regardless of the type of marriage they had (love vs.
arranged/captured). For many, the distress stemmed from husband’s substance abuse,
domestic abuse, unemployment, and lack of support in home responsibilities. All of this
is reflected in differential gender norms within Jumla society.
5) Differential Gender Impact
Differential gender impact represents the unequal treatment of men and women in
society and the subsequent ramifications of this disparate treatment. Two sub-themes
emerged under the main theme “differential gender impact”: 1) personal attitudes and
community response toward child gender and 2) male vs. female work balance.
a) Personal attitudes and community response toward child gender
Child gender was discussed by almost all of the women. However, while there
was consensus between the women over past communal beliefs, the women differed in
terms of their current beliefs and approach to child gender and their perceptions of the
communal response toward child gender.
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Most women expressed a personal indifference toward having a boy or a girl
child. They felt that “sons and daughters are equal” with one woman going so far as to
say that “only ignorant people discriminate between a son and daughter” (M.A., age 26).
Some women who only had daughters said that it “hasn’t made a difference” to their
position in society.
While most women openly embraced both boy and girl children, many still
believed that “society” or the “community” held different beliefs toward child gender.
N.B., a mother to three sons expressed the following over her position in society in
relation to her children’s gender:
If I had no boys people would despise me. I would have been bullied in my
neighborhood for not having a boy… My family would have despised me. Society
and neighbors would have intimidated me. A woman who doesn’t have sons faces
a lot of trouble in society. If I had had no boys society would not have given me
the same position as they have given me now. My husband would have married
another woman for a son.
N.B. believes that not only would the community have “despised” her if she hadn’t had
sons, but her husband would have left her as well. This sentiment was echoed by N.M., a
woman whose husband took a second wife. She said that she could not understand why
he would have taken a second wife “when he already had a son from [her].” Other
women felt that the community would not despise them for their first child being a girl;
however, once a second girl would come, the community would shame them. D.B.
explained: “[The] community doesn’t say anything when you have first girl. But if you
have a lot of girls they despise you. They celebrate with you the first time… [After my
second daughter] the community was also not happy and I also felt a bit sad. I hoped that
it would be a son.”
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While not all women expressed the same perception of community disdain toward
girl children, they expressed a perception of communal preference toward boys. S.R.K., a
44-year-old mother of three, said, “Everyone feels happy when a boy is born. It is like
this everywhere not only in Jumla. They say girls and boys are equal but when a son is
born they celebrate by playing music and putting red vermillion powder on each other.”
K.J., a mother of two boys, expressed a level of prestige granted to her because she has
boys. She said “they treat [her] differently” and “say that [she does] not have trouble
because [she has] no daughter.”
Women felt that part of the preference toward sons was based on the marriage
structure in society. Within Nepali society, daughters are expected to leave their maternal
home to live with the husband’s family. Sons, on the other hand, remain at home and
bring in the added benefit of a daughter-in-law, who can help with the farm and home
chores. A.B.K. talked at length about how her daughters could not help her like a son
could and how her position in society changed when her only son died:
I think society despises me. The god gave me [a son] but he took it back. I keep
thinking why he took it away? I have nothing left… [The community] they say
this woman doesn't have a son. Why does she need to bother about anything? Her
daughters are going to go to others’ homes anyway… I think before my son’s
death my position in society was like this full glass. But later it changed to the
empty glass…Daughters will marry and go away to other’s home. Only I and my
husband will be left. I have nothing left. I have no son.
A.B.K., as well as other women, felt that as they grew older, they would need extra hands
around the house. While daughters help when they are younger, they would eventually
leave, having drained resources during their younger years at home.
Several women expressed that they actually prefer daughters to sons. N.M. felt
that being able to provide for her daughters was a way to mend her own treatment as a
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woman in society. She said, “I love my daughters more [than my sons]. I suffered a lot so
I feel like I should give more love to my daughter. I wish that my daughter has a good life
because I suffered a lot in life.” K.J. did not have any daughters and expressed that she
wishes she had had daughters. However, once her sons were born, she realized how lucky
she was:
To be honest, I wanted a daughter for my first kid. There is nothing I can say now
that the son was born. They sacrificed many goats to celebrate a son’s birth… I felt
happy thinking about other neighbors who only have daughters…Men want sons
and I was happy that I gave birth to a son. In our community no one says that he or
she would like two daughters…I don’t know why they differentiate, after all sons
and daughter both are your own children.
Although it appears that personal attitudes toward child gender have changed, the power
of societal attitudes toward gender seem to be ever present and powerful. While most of
the women expressed ambivalence toward their own child’s gender, they recognized that
community attitudes and even prestige were related to having male or female children.
b) Male vs. female work balance
Women talked extensively about the “male vs. female work balance” in their
community. This theme includes discussion of the labor roles of men and women,
including the employment opportunities available to men and women and the typical
work roles of both. In general, all of the women felt that they do the lion’s share of the
work in their households. They said that they work “a lot more than men” and the
majority of the women expressed that men don’t “do anything.” Most women, even those
with employed or helpful husbands, referenced general male unemployment and/or men
going to the bazaar to hang out instead of work. The work imbalance between men and
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women in Jumla is evident through women describing their typical days. N.M. detailed
her day as follows:
I wake up and sweep the house and go to sell vegetables in the market. I come
back and have lunch. Then sometimes I rest but I never get to rest. I see things
that need to be done. When would I rest?... Then I go to my kitchen garden to
tend saplings. I carry fertilizer for my farm. Sometimes I go to the jungle and
carry back firewood… [My husband] doesn’t do anything. He sleeps all the time
and when he wakes up he goes to hang around. Sometimes he carries rice from
the food distribution office. That’s all the help he offers.
In Jumla, women share a sense that they work harder than women elsewhere in
Nepal and the men in Jumla are not expected to contribute to typically female household
duties if they are unemployed. The women felt that the severity of male unemployment or
“laziness” was particular to Jumla and that “women in other places don’t need to work as
hard as women in Jumla”. A 58-year-old women said that she feels that her “work is very
hard… [In Jumla] only a few men work. Women do everything in Jumla. Men have
become lazy.” While some women expressed that they are “used to it” (doing more work
than their husbands), other women said that they are frustrated and feel like “slaves”. One
woman expressed frustration over the imbalance:
Men do not have to work as much as women… It is very frustrating because we have
to work all the time and men can just hang around the bazaar and work at their office.
(K.J, age 33).
Many women explained that female happiness was dependent on husband’s
employment. “Happy women” are those who have “earning husbands”. “Sad women” are
“those who have to do everything on their own”. S.U., a 40-year-old farmer said: “If I
had property and my husband had a job I would be happier…If one has employed
husband you could just buy rice from the market. You wouldn’t have to do everyone’s
work.” This connection between husband’s unemployment and happiness was common,
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partially reflecting that with male unemployment comes an increased workload was
common.
Interestingly, although women complained about the female workload in society,
they did not expect their sons to take on a larger load and rather, expected their daughters
to assume a similar role as them in relation to household duties. A 33- year-old mother of
two boys commented:
A mother needs a daughter. If I had a daughter she would have helped me in
whatever I did. She would have helped me with the kitchen work or household
work. Sons do not care a lot.
While for the most part “male vs. female work balance” was discussed in relation
to male unemployment and female sadness, there were some variations in the theme’s
applicability. Women often discussed “male vs. female work balance” in the context of
their inability to pursue education because of burdensome household duties. They also
related the labor role imbalance to certain health problems, like prolapsed uterus after
pregnancy because of the need to go back to work soon after delivery and the inability to
get proper rest when sick/injured.
There were some marked differences in the expression of “male vs. female work
balance” between sub-groups. Women in the decreasing depression sub-group, while
aware and open about the issue, did not express as much frustration with the imbalance
between gender labor roles as did women in the increasing depression sub-group. One
woman in the decreasing depression sub-group said that this was just the way things were
and another woman said that there was a work imbalance in society but that her husband
had a job and was helpful and supportive. Women in the increasing depression sub-group
felt that life was harder for women in Jumla because they had to work harder than women
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elsewhere. They spoke more about how their lives were difficult because of the
imbalance and due to their workload they were unable to pursue education/employment
goals. Both groups, however, expressed that there was a stark imbalance in labor roles
between genders.
An interesting sub-group distinction was found between younger, more educated
women and older, less educated women. The younger women talked disproportionately
more about the work imbalance than older women, and expressed greater discontent over
the imbalance. Younger women seemed aware of alternatives to their current lifestyle.
They understood that there were areas of the world where women experienced a lifestyle
with greater gender equality and this awareness created distressing cognitive dissonance.
On the other hand, older women felt that the state of gender equality had been this way
for years and that they actually suffered less than women before them. They viewed
themselves as part of a continuum existing solely within Jumla and/or Nepali society. As
opposed to the younger women who compared themselves to a global community, the
older women had a more limited perspective, easing their concerns by comparing
themselves to other women who lived in the same environment with similar conditions.
6) Suicide
Four dominant sub-themes around suicide emerged from the in-depth-interviews:
a) reasons for committing suicide; b) impulsivity in suicide; c) speculation of family
involvement in suicide; and d) reactions toward suicide. These four themes provide a
complex view of the women’s attitudes and beliefs relating to suicide in Jumla.
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a) Reasons for committing suicide
The interviewees provided many different reasons for committing suicide. In
general, there was consensus over the common reasons for committing suicide for both
men and women: domestic issues, male alcoholism, economic concerns and educational
stress. Finally, mental health issues were mentioned rarely as a cause of suicide.
Domestic Issues
Overall, domestic issues were cited as the primary cause of suicide amongst both
men and women. The main domestic issues mentioned as causes for suicide were
physical and emotional abuse, polygamy/extramarital affairs, and marital choice.
Domestic violence as a cause of suicide was mentioned in relation to both men and
women. For instance, K.J. said that a man might commit suicide over guilt or shame after
“maiming” his wife. A.C.D. said that “some [women] commit suicide because their
husband[s] make them suffer. Some men commit suicide because of their wife.” While
these quotes exhibit both male and female suicide as a result of domestic violence,
overwhelmingly, domestic violence was mentioned as a cause of female suicide over
male suicide.
In addition to spousal abuse, the women cited problems with in-laws as a reason
some women may attempt suicide. S.U. spoke about the circumstances surrounding her
sister’s suicide. She explained:
Last year my sister hanged herself… She could not tolerate what her [in-law]
family said to her…She killed herself because she had problems with her fatherand mother-in-law.
In Jumla society, women move in with their in-laws upon marriage. For some women,
tensions with their new family prove too much.
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Polygamy and extramarital affairs were often cited as reasons women commit
suicide. N.B.M. said that a woman may attempt suicide “[i]f the husband brings home
another wife and neglects the household.” Leaving the first wife feeling “frustrated.”
A.B.K. recounted a story she recently heard about a woman in a nearby village who
committed suicide. When the husband married a second wife, the husband and wife got
into a fight and “[she] hung herself.”
Although not mentioned frequently, extramarital affairs were discussed as a cause
for suicide. M.A.’s sister-in-law committed suicide after her husband had an affair. M.A.
explained: “He had an affair with other women. She heard of the affair. She asked her
husband not to do so. Her husband also loved her and brought her whatever she asked for.
Then they had a fight…[and] she hanged herself.“
Finally, choice in marriage was mentioned several times as a potential reason that
both men and women may commit suicide. A.B.D. explained:
A boy wants to get married to a girl he chooses but his parents have an objection
to that. They say they will not accept a daughter-in-law from a lower caste in the
house. Then in frustration a man commits suicide…The reason is almost similar
for women. They try to get married to a man of their choice. Parents usually say
they have to get married to an educated man from their own caste group. They get
married and if they could not get along with the in-laws they commit suicide.
While men may commit suicide before the marriage ensues, women may feel less
empowered to defy parental wishes before the marriage. However, if the marriage causes
additional emotional distress, she may opt for suicide.
Male Alcoholism
Many women mentioned how alcohol abuse can lead to suicide among both men
and women. The interviewees said that many men “drink alcohol and hang themselves”
or kill themselves in another manner. D.D.M. said that “[a] lot of [men] have died of
75
alcoholism,” with some dying from “falling down and some [dying from] falling from the
hill under the effect of alcohol. Some of them have drowned in the creek.” Speaking
about her personal situation, D.D.M. said that her own husband “has problem of
alcoholism” and that she is “worried that something will happen to him” like that “he will
drown in the creek or in the river.”
Many of the women discussed how men might get into fights when they are
drunk, and kill themselves out of frustration. For instance, N.M. described a situation in
which a man killed himself after a fight with his wife: “Recently one man jumped into the
river. He drank alcohol and had a fight with his wife. He jumped into the river and got
swept away.”
Women, on the other hand, commit suicide as a result of their husband’s alcohol
abuse. Some women “have hanged themselves getting tired of drinking habits of their
husbands.” D.B. explained that women may “poison themselves” or “hang themselves”
when they get “tired of drinking habits of their husbands.” When men drink, she
explained, they “fight at home. Many households face this problem.”
Economic Concerns
Economic concerns were frequently mentioned as a cause of suicide in Jumla.
Specifically, women mentioned how economic concerns related to worries over
providing food, clothing and education to their children could cause excess stress and
lead to suicide. Women explained that “people suffer…if they do not have any source of
income.” In this dire economic situation, a person thinks “about how he will manage his
meals, how he will buy clothes or live his daily life… [and his] worries keep increasing.”
For this reason, D.D.M. explained that “people hang themselves or take medicines and
76
die “ (D.D.M., age 27).
Many of the women believed that such economic concerns weighed more heavily
on women than on men. M.A. elaborated:
!"#$%&#'()$'*$++,-'./,*,0#1!!"#$"%#&'&())*#+(,-#(#'"&./-#"0#1$/"2-3#4+-*#
!"#$%&''(")$*+&,#$-&%$#&$."/)$#-"('$0-(1)'"/$#&$.0-&&1$&'$-&%$#&$!"#$%&'(&
!"#$%&'"$()%#*+&,-.&!-&/%-0$)#&'(-!"$*1&2-%&!"#&'"$()%#*3&4-5#*&6768((9&!"$*:&
!"#$%&'#()!*+,-$.#/,0#1),#!0+2#304,),$4,5#30#6,44306#4',-$,+7,$#5)%08.#9',2#
!"#$%&!"#$%&'#$(&''!#)$*&$*+#$(&%,-.!"
While economic concerns were mentioned primarily as a cause of female suicide,
economic concerns related to debt were mentioned as a male catalyst toward suicide.
M.A. said that “[m]en usually commit suicide if they are too worried about their debt.
Some people drink and gamble. They loose all their property in gambling. Then they
commit suicide after they have lost everything.” It is clear from the women’s comments
that economic concerns related to suicide are tied up with the male vs. female work
imbalance in Jumla society and alcoholism.
Educational Stress
Educational stress was mentioned as a potential cause for suicide with “people
harm[ing] themselves when they fail in studies.” N.B.M. explained further: “Some young
people commit suicide if they fail in exams and feel embarrassed that his or her friends
have moved ahead and he or she lagged behind. They think their dreams are not fulfilled.”
The women emphasized that educational stress was more relevant to male suicide than
female suicide. Yet, N.M. explained that women might be more susceptible to the effects
of educational stress if they are not yet married: “Women who are not married sometimes
kill themselves if they fail in [school leaving certificate] examinations.”
77
Mental Health Issues
Mental health, or heart-mind, issues were rarely mentioned as a cause for suicide.
N.B.M. said that “[s]ome people are not fine in their mind and commit suicide” and N.M.
explained one female suicide by saying that the woman was “not mentally fit in her mind.”
Both helplessness and frustration were cited as mental states that could lead to suicide.
A.B.K. said that “[i]t must be the helplessness that they feel in their heart-mind which
makes them [commit suicide]. They have fights and conflict and they feel like it’s better
to die than live.” Others pointed to frustration as an impetus to commit suicide. For
instance, N.B. discussed how frustration could upset one’s mental balance and lead to
suicide:
When people are frustrated [with] their circumstances they try to harm themselves.
…The kind of frustration that one feels when things don’t go as one has planned
or wished…Frustration like the feeling that they have when their farm doesn’t
yield good harvest. They feel like they do not want to work on their farm anymore.
They feel frustrated when their goals are not met.
Another woman said that she “heard that some people when they have fights tell the other
party to die and the other party kills himself or herself out of frustration” (N.M., age 35).
Interestingly, none of the women mentioned extreme sadness/depression as a cause for
suicide.
b) Impulsivity in suicide
The theme of impulsivity was highly pervasive when the women talked about the
circumstances surrounding a suicide. Impulsivity in suicide is defined as suicide as a
result of a fight, reaction toward an incident of domestic violence, alcohol or drug abuse,
78
or accidental overdose to draw attention. It does not include suicide as a result of
depression.
The most frequent reason cited was a suicide attempt following a fight. One
interviewee said, “a lot of people commit suicide…some people have fights … and kill
themselves” (A.C.D., age 43). The women said that following a fight, a man or woman
may feel so frustrated and overwhelmed that they jump into the nearby river, take poison,
or hang themselves. S.U.K. told a story about two women who were married to the same
man. They had a fight and “both of them jumped into the river… The river was flooding
and it took them both away.”
The relationship between frustration and suicide was especially salient for men.
For instance, the interviewees discussed how men’s “hot anger” could lead to fights and
subsequent alcohol abuse. If something “happens while they are drunk they kill
themselves.” For instance, N.M. said that there was a recent incident where a drunken
man fought with his wife and killed himself by jumping into a nearby river. Several
women discussed how “hot anger” amongst men could lead to suicide. Without the
ability to regulate their emotions, men may do rash things that lead to suicide. R.K.
expressed this concept of “hot anger” as “high blood pressure.” She said that there are
“foolish men who have high blood pressure. They do not have power to tolerate things.
So they commit suicide. They beat their wives and hang themselves. They maim their
wives.” Again, these stories reflect impulsivity and lack of a suicide plan.
A common story repeated amongst the women was of a woman committing
suicide by accident. A woman tries to get attention from her husband or threaten her
husband after a fight by taking poison. Yet, without knowledge of the toxicity of the
79
poison or lacking proper health care, the woman dies. N.M. described a typical situation
that could result in suicide:
Women suffer a lot… They feel like if they take a small amount [of poison]
nothing will happen but if they take an overdose they will die of the poison…
Sometimes they are cured in the hospital…Some people do it without being
serious about it. They think that they would not die…Women try to threaten the
men and attempt suicide without meaning to kill themselves.
Stories such as these reflect a lack of foresight in relation to a “suicidal” attempt.
Frustration, anger, lack of foresight due to alcohol abuse, and the need for attention may
all lead to impulsive suicidal attempts that may result in suicide completion.
c) Speculation of family involvement in suicide
Often when the women discussed the circumstances surrounding a suicide, they
mentioned the potential or suspected role of family in causing the suicide. The women
echoed a belief that family members could cause such extreme distress as to lead
someone to suicide. Often, they said, family members try to hide a suicide because of a
fear that they will be blamed for the death because this belief is so prevalent in society.
For instance, women shared the view that “if there was a fight before the person
committed suicide, [the family will] try to hide [the suicide] because of the fear of being
charged for the person’s death.” This distrust of the family leads to long-standing
suspicions and skepticism of the family of an individual who committed suicide.
In particular, there was suspicion of in-laws in the case of a female suicide. One
woman described the typical order of events following a married woman’s suicide:
When a woman kills herself her parents come and investigate the incident.
Sometimes they hit the women’s husband’s family with stones and ask why they
killed their daughter. The husband’s family usually says that they didn’t do
80
anything. She killed herself. If the maternal home of the woman is not convinced
the issue prolongs for a long time.
While the women said that this suspicion does not lead to poor treatment of the husband
and in-laws, they did say that there exists a lasting sense that the family must have had
some sort of involvement. In general, in relation to both male and female suicide, the
women felt that although the community will not treat the family differently, “people
[will still] speculate that the family must have tortured the person or must have done
something to him or her” that led to suicide” (M.A., age 26).
d) Reactions toward suicide
In general, the women felt that people who commit suicide are “foolish”. There
was a general belief that people should “struggle” through life rather than give up
prematurely. The typical attitude was that people only get “one chance to live” so why
sacrifice the opportunity. One woman went as far to say that people in Jumla “are going
to die of pain anyway why … kill yourself” (S.U., age 40)."
A couple of the women referenced religious beliefs as a reason not to commit
suicide. N.B.M. explained: “You get a human life after passing 84 other lives. Why do
you need to kill yourself?” However, reactions to suicide as it related to religious beliefs
did not dominate the field of responses. Most of the women believed that although people
commit suicide to escape their situations, they could have “found a solution to [their]
problems”. For instance, A.B.D. explained her reaction when someone commits suicide:
I wonder why they have to hang themselves. They waste their lives. If it is difficult
for them to live in that house they can go live in other house. They can find
another husband and go live with him. If they had a forced marriage and didn’t like
the husband they can simply find another man. Why do they need to hang
81
themselves?
Women said that people in the community would offer to help a suicidal person,
particularly a woman, by finding them an alternate solution to her problems. However,
most of the women recognized that it is hard to discern if someone is going to commit
suicide so it is often difficult to take advance preventative measures.
One woman emphasized that the suicide of a woman is more significant than the
suicide of a man. M.A. spoke personally about her sister-in-law’s suicide:
!"#$#"$%&'(#)*'+#*%#),'+-.%#$""'/%#/&*0)('-#%&$%#12/&#32%#4&'-#$#1,%!"#$%&"'$&($
!""#$%&'$()*+,#-'.#,/'01$(2'3#,'$()*+,#-'!,#')-'+##4'5,)#"2'3#,'(1&6!-+'78-9%'
!"#$%&'(')*%+'",%",-"%+#.-)%/0!"%123-0!2%!,2%4'&&25%,26!2&78%92%+'&&%&'(2%,'!%
!"#$%&'()$*+,-$.&.$/+($0(-$12$.2&#03$4$-+&#5$&-6/$,$",/-($-!$.&()$4-$&/$1(--(7$-!$
!"#$%%!"#$%&'#(&)$"#*+,-#!./"#0*#1+22.$$.'3#),.1.4"5#
!"#$%&'("%)&*'+%,&-#-&,'(&%./)%00&("#0&0%,(#+%,(1&!"#$!!"#$%&'(")$&!"#$%!"#$%&
!"#$%"&'()*)+"'&,"-".&/0".&$'1"+&$23(4&'()*)+"&).&5"."6$%7&$.+&03/&40"'"&'()*)+"'&
!""#$%&%'#&"!()*+,&"
The five major themes that emerged from the women’s in-depth-interviews depict
a rich landscape of the thoughts, perceptions, and emotions of women in Jumla. Their
views on mental health issues, economics, education, domestic issues, differential gender
impacts and suicide paint a vivid picture of the intricacies of female life and the struggles
that they face daily. Through an understanding of these themes, one can begin to
concentrate on mental health programming aimed at improving well-being and reducing
female suicides in Nepal.
82
Chapter 4: Discussion, Conclusion and Recommendations
Discussion
The goals of the study were to explore a) how the roles of different sociocultural
factors (such as marital relationships, social supports, and female roles in society) effect
women’s mental health b) women’s beliefs and attitudes about suicide and c) contributing
factors toward committing suicide. The study was part of a larger, longitudinal study
started in 2000, with an additional data point in 2007. Women were selected to participate
in the current qualitative study based on changes in their Beck Depression Inventory
(BDI) scores collected in 2007 and 2011 - half with increasing depression scores over
time and half with decreasing depression scores over time. Both in-depth interviews and
case studies were used to approach the research questions.
The two case studies revealed how mental health issues, economics, education,
domestic issues, differential gender impacts and suicide affect women in Nepal. The
women noted marital problems as a particular issue negatively affecting their mental
health. This is substantiated by other studies, which found that marital problems play a
much larger role in suicidal ideation in Asia than it does elsewhere in the world (Khan,
2002). In particular, the studies highlight how the accumulation of societal stressors could
lead to suicidal ideation and eventual suicidal attempts and completion. This is consistent
with the social stress model of suicide, which claims that suicide is a social problem
rather than a problem caused by mental illness (Phillips, Liu, & Zhang, 1999). These
social stressors, such as marital issues, economic problems, and gender inequality can
accumulate and lead to suicide.
Based on the in-depth interviews, six dominant themes emerged as highly salient to
83
women’s mental health and their beliefs and perceptions about suicide: 1) mental health
issues (including depression/sadness and anxiety/worries); 2) economics; 3) education;
4) domestic issues (including domestic strife and alcohol abuse and love vs.
arranged/captured marriage); 5) differential gender impacts (including personal
attitudes and community response toward child gender and male vs. female work
balance); and 6) suicide (including reasons for committing suicide, impulsivity in
suicide, speculation of family involvement in suicide, and reactions toward suicide).
These six themes intersect to provide a complex picture of the female experience in
Jumla and how different sociocultural factors affect female mental well-being and in
some cases, lead to suicidal ideation and attempts. The interaction between these themes
will be discussed later in the chapter after a review of the study’s findings.
Women commonly discussed sadness, hopelessness, and inadequacy, with three
particular influences on sadness referenced most often: economic conditions, inability to
acquire/provide education, and marriage. These issues were also highlighted as sources of
sadness among women in Jumla in both ethnographic and epidemiologic research by
Kohrt et. al. (Kohrt, et al., 2005; Kohrt & Worthman, 2009). It is unsurprising that these
three factors were most notable. They reflect gender inequality, which has been shown to
contribute to women’s risk for depression in LMIC (Ali, et al., 2009). Findings about the
harsh effects of economic conditions on mental wellness were consistent with results
from Das et. al. who found that gender was a risk factor for poor mental health even
when controlling for poverty (Das, Do, Friedman, McKenzie, & Scott, 2007). This may
be related to cultural limitations against women making economic decisions in the
household. Without access to financial resources and control over financial decision-
84
making, women feel the accruing stresses of providing for their families and often must
sacrifice vital resources to keep food on the table.
Findings about the relationship between lack of access to education and sadness
were consistent with findings from Kohrt et. al. (Kohrt, et al., 2005). Without education,
women felt that their ability to advance in society was stymied and they were perpetually
stuck in their unfortunate situations. Deprivation of education was found to be a principle
reason why many girls joined the Maoist army in Nepal (Kohrt, Tol, Pettigrew, & Karki,
2010). The current study also found that marriage was a principle cause for sadness, with
the action of leaving one’s maternal home being especially traumatic for women. This is
consistent with findings from Desjarlais (1991) who found that Yolmo women in Nepal
have particular songs of sorrow related to marriage and leaving their parents’ homes
(Desjarlais, 1991, 1992). Additionally, it is consistent with findings from other studies
conducted in LMIC which find that women are significantly affected emotionally by
difficult marital relationships (Lee & Klienman, 2000; Vijayakumar & Thilothammal,
1993). Marital relationships are the central unit within the community and it is almost
unheard of for a marriage to dissolve in a Nepali context. Therefore, marital problems
are inescapable, leaving women feeling trapped and despondent.
Like findings from other Nepali psychological anthropology studies, the women did
not use the term “depression” to describe these emotional states. Kohrt and Hruschka
(2010) found that the general Nepali population poorly understood the English term
“depression”, a term commonly used by Nepali health professionals (Kohrt & Hruschka,
2010).
Anxiety/worry was a highly prevalent concept among the women interviewed in the
85
study. This is consistent with studies finding a high prevalence of anxiety among women
in Nepal, with women in Jumla having greater than two times the anxiety levels of men
(Kohrt & Worthman, 2009). The difference in anxiety levels between men and women in
Nepal is among the highest gender differences in anxiety in the world (Kohrt &
Worthman, 2009). The current study found that women who have become more
depressed over time talked about their worries/anxieties significantly more than women
whose have become less depressed over time. The overlapping aspects of depression and
anxiety highlight how depression can affect perception and highly impact quality of life.
These findings are consistent with Cognitive Behavior Therapy in which less cognitive
reports of worried thoughts are associated with improvements in depression (Beck,
2011).
Health was found to be a primary source of anxiety/worry in this study, consistent
with findings from other studies, which found health to be a primary source of anxiety
amongst women (Kohrt, et al., 2005; Kohrt, et al., 2009). Additionally, worry over child
gender was found to be a source of anxiety. Studies have found similar gender preference
in India (Mahalingam, Haritatos, & Jackson, 2007; Mahalingam & Jackson, 2007), with
high endorsement of masculinity in society having negative mental health consequences
for women (Mahalingam & Jackson, 2007).
Economics were also shown to be a major source of anxiety amongst women and
serve as a primary focus within the community. There were no significant differences in
the perception and expression of economic difficulties between women who earned more
per month and women who earned less. This is not reflected in the literature, but may be
related to the cultural limitations in financial decision-making hypothesized above.
86
Another factor may be that economic concerns in this context appear to be unrelated to
‘relative’ poverty in Jumla but rather related to a perception that everyone is too poor to
meet their needs.
Education served as a major focus for the women, with women mentioning
education in the context of regret toward not receiving additional education, worry/desire
to provide children with education, and the relationship between economics and
education. All of the women felt they did not have enough education, or weren’t treated
like they were educated. Similar to poverty, it is not a relative lack of education, but
perception that all women need more education and to be treated as if they are educated.
Findings from Kohrt et. al. support this finding (Kohrt, 2009). In that study a Nepali
teenage girl explains her parent’s response to her request to go to school. Her mother said
“Is an elephant big because he studies?” (Kohrt, 2009). Even when a girl is educated in
the community, they do not receive the recognition typically earned by men through
education acquisition. Women in the current study had more hope for future generations
and their abilities to acquire education and progress in society. This connection between
education and progress is substantiated in the literature, which shows that more education
has been shown to be related to having less children (LeVine, 2006), one way to increase
health and economic conditions.
Domestic issues, such as domestic strife and alcohol abuse, were highly salient for
the women. Both domestic strife and alcohol abuse were frequently cited as causes for
depression, anxiety, inadequacy, and suicide. Another study had similar findings, with
husband’s alcohol consumption, which often leads to domestic violence, making women
more vulnerable to mental health disorders (Kohrt, et al., 2009). Interestingly, many of
87
the reasons women cited for feeling sadness, hopelessness, and inadequacy (poverty, lack
of education, and domestic abuse/spouse’s alcoholism) are the same reasons women cited
for joining the Maoists in the Nepali Civil War (Gautam, Banskota, & Manchanda, 2001;
Kohrt et al., 2010; Pettigrew & Shneiderman, 2004; Sharma & Prasain, 2004).
In the current study sample, the majority of women described experiencing some
form of domestic strife or violence – from verbal to physical abuse. The central role of
domestic strife and violence in the conversation about women’s mental health is reflected
in the literature as well. Studies have found rates as high as half of the female population
in India experiencing domestic violence (Jejeebhoy, 1998), with ample evidence showing
an association between domestic violence and mental health issues amongst women (Ali,
et al., 2009; Fischbach & Herbert, 1997; Garcia-Moreno, et al., 2005). Women who
experience such physical and emotional violence feel like they have no escape in a
patriarchal society, which views these acts as acceptable (Khan, 1998).
Study results pointing to alcohol as a source of domestic strife and mental health
problems among women is reflected in findings from other studies conducted in South
Asia and Nepal (M. Koenig, et al., 2004; Kohrt & Worthman, 2009). This is similar to
findings from a study conducted in Nepal that found that among young married men and
women, husband’s use of alcohol was the most commonly mentioned factor related to
domestic abuse (Puri, et al., 2010). The dramatic increase in alcohol abuse among men
has been an unfortunate byproduct of modernization in Asia (Patel et al., 2007).
Although women frequently discussed love and arranged/captured marriages, no
significant differences in mental well-being were found between women who had love
marriages vs. women who had captured/arranged marriages. This is contrary to previous
88
studies that found a positive association between depression and arranged marriage (Ali,
et al., 2009).
Most women expressed a personal indifference toward child gender; however, all of
the women agreed that society showed a definite preference toward male children. They
discussed celebrations that occurred following the birth of a boy in juxtaposition to
communal disdain toward a woman who has many female children. This attitude is
evident from past studies which found similar cultural attitudes toward child gender in
Nepal and elsewhere in South Asia (Law & Liu, 2008; Niaz & Hassan, 2006). It remains
unclear why the personal attitudes of the women in the study were so divergent from the
perceived communal attitudes toward child gender.
Women talked extensively about the “male vs. female work balance” in their
community, with women feeling like they do the majority of the work in their
households. Younger women talked more about the work imbalance than older women,
and expressed greater discontent over the imbalance. Older women felt like it had been
this way for years and that they actually suffered less than women before them, and this
is consistent with household surveys that demonstrated decrease in the gender disparity in
work from the 1980s to late 1990s (Cooke, 2000). This is similarly reflected in age
differences found in women related to feelings of sadness, hopelessness, and inadequacy.
For younger women, work imbalance seems to be paramount to their mental well-being.
Similar to other aspects of female mental health mentioned earlier, gender imbalance was
emphasized by the Maoists to recruit supporters. Male unemployment was cited as a
major issue in the community leading to an increased burden on women. Other South
Asian countries have also seen an increase in male unemployment, attributed to the
89
economic developments of modernization that may negatively affect rural communities
(Patel, et al., 2006).
For both men and women, common reasons for committing suicide were domestic
issues, male alcoholism, economic concerns and educational stress, with mental health
issues rarely mentioned as a cause of suicide. This is supported by literature from China
and India, that shows that cultural stressors and domestic violence, rather than depression
or other mental health disorders, play a greater role in suicidal risk (Ahmed & Zuberi,
1981; Lee, et al., 2007; Pradhan, et al., 2010; Vijayakumar, et al., 2005).
Overall, domestic issues and male alcoholism were cited as the primary causes of
suicide amongst both men and women, with physical and emotional abuse,
polygamy/extramarital affairs, and marital choice most often cited. These results are
consistent with studies that found a strong relationship between domestic violence and
suicidal behavior among women (Gururaj, et al., 2004). In a study conducted in Nepal,
husbands were noted as the “predominant contributor” to female suicides (Pradhan, et al.,
2010), with husbands being a source of verbal and physical abuse.
Polygamy/extramarital affairs as a cause for suicidal behavior have also been described in
China (Phillips, et al., 1999). This is reflective of the social stress model of suicide, which
views suicide as a social problem rather than a problem caused by mental illness (Phillips,
et al., 1999). Polygamy and extramarital affairs can be viewed as a type of emotional
abuse.
Findings about the relationship between educational stress and unfulfilled dreams
and suicide are consistent with previous research findings, which found high rates of
suicide among young adults due to academic pressures and shame associated with failure.
90
It is also consistent with a study which found that “unfulfilled dreams”, especially failing
the SLC, was seen as one of the most traumatic experiences of one’s life (Kohrt et al.,
2011). Finally, marital choice was cited as a cause for suicide, a finding validated in a
study demonstrating that sometimes women chose suicide when prevented from marrying
the man of their choice (Vijayakumar & Thilothammal, 1993).
Impulsivity was found to be a highly prevalent issue when the women talked about
the circumstances surrounding a suicide. Suicides following fights and times of
frustration were said to be most common. This finding is consistent with data that shows
that individuals with impulsive disorders are at much greater risk for suicide than
individuals with depression, especially in LMIC (Nock, Hwang, Sampson, & Kessler,
2010). The connection between poison and impulsivity was clear from this study and has
been discussed thoroughly in the literature about suicide in South Asia (Joseph, et al.,
2003; Phillips, Li, et al., 2002). Women in the current study discussed cases of suicide
where a woman tried to get her husband’s attention or threaten her husband after a fight
by taking poison. Without knowledge about the toxicity of poisons and/or adequate
medical care (Eddleston & Phillips, 2004), they may die from the impulsive attempt.
This is similar to finding from the MMM Study 2008/2009 which found that many
women who ingested pesticides did so to threaten their husbands and families and often
did not fully understand the lethality of their actions (Pradhan, et al., 2010). This type of
act is consistent with “instrumental suicidal behavior” where someone engages in an act
or makes claims that they are going to commit suicide in order to gain attention or other
support, but the person does not intend to die (Oquendo, et al., 2003).
All of the women cited speculation of family involvement in female suicides and
91
subsequent suspicion of cover-ups conducted by the deceased’s family. Nepali law
dictates that family members of an individual who has completed suicide may be fined,
inhibiting family members from reporting attempted or completed suicides. This is
similar to the situation in China and India (Gajalakshmi & Peto, 2007; Gunnell, et al.,
2007).
In general, women felt that individuals who commit suicide are foolish and that
those individuals should have struggled through life rather than give up prematurely.
There is no research to date that looks at female perceptions of suicide in LMIC. The
participants’ attitudes seem to be reflective of a religious environment which views
suicide as disrespectful to the body and life that is considered holy.
Based on the results from the current study as well as consistent findings from other
studies, a model has been developed to explain how societal factors affect female mental
health and suicide in Jumla, Nepal. Figure 2 below presents a schematic of the interaction
between the six dominant themes that emerged from the in-depth interviews and case
studies. The sub-themes “love vs. arranged/captured marriage” and “education” are
included under the heading “Societal Norms”. The theme “economics” is relevant
throughout the process to suicidal outcomes.
92
Figure 2. The effects of societal factors on female mental health and suicide in Jumla,
Nepal.
Men and women in Jumla have different entry points into society. Women enter
purely through traditional society, adhering to traditional roles and expected to maintain
their traditional position in society. Men, on the other hand, enter through both traditional
and modern societies. They maintain a belief that traditional societal roles are important
to maintain in the home (especially in relation to their wife’s role); yet, they also enter
society through the lens of modernization – where they are no longer expected to work on
their farms and have increasing access to alcohol and modern vices. This differential
access to modernization, with the persistent application of traditional societal
expectations on women, leads to women’s ultimate mental health outcomes.
Traditional society and modernization effect societal norms in the community,
such as who is expected to work the farm, take care of children and provide for the
family, how marriages are established, and how education is distributed. These norms,
which are traditional for women and a mix of traditional and modern for men, lead to a
differential gender impact between men and women. Men, seeking employment outside
93
of the home (an aspect of modernization), are no longer expected to work on the farm. In
fact, the process of modernization has transformed farm work into an almost purely
female job. However, Jumla has yet to progress to the point of commercialization where
there are ample jobs available to men who choose to work outside of the home, leaving
women as the primary financial providers of the family.
Due to the shifting roles of men and women in society, men no longer play the
customary role of family provider. With free time and a persistent belief that women are
not equals, they spend much of their time hanging out with friends in the bazaar and
consuming alcohol. Alcohol abuse as well as the debasement of typical manhood pillars
result in domestic violence and strife. Subsequently, women experience sadness,
depression and/or anxiety. The accumulation of such stresses may lead to suicidal
ideation or suicidal attempts.
While the associations between mental health/suicide and modernization have
been minimally explored in Asia, many researchers and theorists assume that
development and modernization have a negative effect on mental health (Pradhan, et al.,
2010). For instance, examples from China have shown that modernization has
detrimental effects on traditional society, thereby increasing suicide rates (Law & Liu,
2008). And although working practices change rapidly with modernization, more
traditional societal practices are not changing at the same pace (Pradhan, et al., 2010). In
traditional societies experiencing transition, such as in Jumla, women are expected to
preserve family and religious traditions in the face of modernization and increased
expectations to fulfill domestic roles.
94
Strengths and Limitations
A main strength of the study is its longitudinal methodology. Based on longitudinal
data, the researcher was able to identify women with increasing and decreasing
depression over time. This allowed the collection of varied perspectives related to mental
health and suicide. Additionally, the study also had a quantitative component, giving the
researcher valuable background information on each participant, which made the
interviews rich and deep. It also allowed for crucial rapport building time, as each
participant was visited at least twice. Finally, the interviewer was from Nepal and was
fluent in Nepali. As a woman, she was able to relate to the participants and put them at
ease.
There were several limitations to the study. The researcher did not know Nepali and
therefore, all interviews were conducted with the aid of a translator. Therefore, the
researcher’s verbal communication with the participants was conducted through a conduit,
limiting rapport. Additionally, as all of the interviews were conducted in Nepali and
translated to English for analysis, the interviews could not be evaluated in their original
form. Finally, due to the close nature of families and communities in Jumla, there were
often other individuals present during the interviews, possibly limiting the full disclosure
of the participants.
Conclusion
Currently, more than 6 million Nepalese - 20% of the total population - have
symptoms of mental health disorders (IRIN News, 2010a). Of particular concern is the
rise of suicide in Nepali society, particularly amongst women. The Nepal Maternal
95
Mortality and Morbidity (MMM) Study 2008/2009 found that suicide was the leading
cause of death amongst women of reproductive age (15-49). While the mental health
situation in Nepal appears to be in urgent need of redress, mental health needs have been
largely neglected, underreported and underfunded. Consequently, there is a dearth of
data on mental health and suicide in Nepal, particularly amongst women.
While the association between suicide and mental health disorders in Nepal is still
debatable, there is increasing acceptance for the growing role of cultural stressors on
suicide. Many of the factors that may predispose a woman to mental health disorders or
suicidal behavior are related to the status and treatment of women in Nepal. Women are
commonly denied education, choice in marriage, economic independence, and
reproductive independence, making them dependent upon their husbands for economic
subsistence. The denial of basic rights and freedoms to women in Nepal “increas[es] their
vulnerability to violence, injury and suicide” (Pradhan, et al., 2010).
Little is known about how specific factors interact to contribute to mental health
issues and suicide amongst women in Nepal.The current study attempts to fill this gap in
the literature by exploring how cultural stressors affect a women’s mental health and how
women perceive suicide in Nepal.
Implications/Recommendations
This study has several important programmatic and clinical implications. Women
in this study, as well as previous studies, did not relate to or understand the term
“depression”. Clinically, it is important to utilize and employ local mental health
terminology in order to a) relate to patients, b) understand what they are trying to express
96
and c) explain mental health conditions appropriately.
Additionally, mental health issues were not mentioned as a primary factor in
committing suicide. Rather, a combination of sociocultural factors was found to influence
suicidal behavior. The clinical and programmatic implications for this are significant.
Treating depression alone will not reduce suicide attempts. Rather, in order to reduce
suicide incidence, interventions must address domestic violence, alcoholism, and
women’s access to income and education. Due to the central role of men in affecting
female mental health, these interventions should involve and target men as well as
women.
Findings about the role of impulsive behavior in suicidal acts may be highly
beneficial toward designing efficacious suicide intervention programs. The impulsive
suicidal behavior commonly seen in Nepal is congruous with Borderline Personality
Disorder and would best be treated with Dialectical Behavior Therapy (Linehan et al.,
2006; Regmi, et al., 2004; Stanley, Brodsky, Nelson, & Dulit, 2007). Dialectical
Behavior Therapy combines standard cognitive-behavioral therapy techniques with
techniques derived from Zen Buddhist meditative practice, such as distress tolerance and
mindful awareness (Palmer, 2002). Many of these techniques may be familiar to the local
community and serve as a valuable way to reach the target population in a culturally
appropriate manner.
Nepal is unique within the South Asian region. It has yet to undergo the same type
of massive economic upheaval seen elsewhere in the region, which has affected suicide
trends. Therefore, this is a prime opportunity to learn from other South Asian countries
and preemptively institute cultural and communal institutions and safeguards to mental
97
health. Future research should explore suicidal beliefs and attitudes among women
elsewhere in Nepal, in particular, in more urban locals.
98
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APPENDIX
Acronym List
BAI – Beck Anxiety Inventory
DALY – Disability-adjusted life years
BDI – Beck Depression Inventory
CMD – Common mental disorder
DSM-IV – Diagnostic and Statistical Manual, Version IV
GNI – Gross national income
HDI – Human Development Index
IA – Proficiency Certificate (college level)
LMIC – Lower and middle income countries
MDD – Major Depressive Disorder
PTSD – Post-traumatic Stress Disorder
SES – Socio-economic status
SLC – School Leaving Certificate (high school level)
WHO – World Health Organization
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Glossary
Anxiety – “a feeling of fear, unease, and worry; source of these symptoms is not always
known” (PubMed Health, 2011b).
Borderline Personality Disorder – “a condition in which people have long-term
patterns of unstable or turbulent emotions, such as feelings about themselves and others”;
may lead to impulsive actions and chaotic relationships (PubMed Health, 2010a).
Common mental disorder – term used to describe a varied range of disorders
characterized by anxiety and depressive symptoms “commonly encountered in
community settings and whose occurrence signals a breakdown in normal
functioning” (Goldberg & Huxley, 1992).
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy – “an empirically supported treatment that focuses on
patterns of thinking that are maladaptive and the beliefs that underlie such thinking”
(Warman & Beck, 2003).
Conversion disorder - “a condition in which a person has blindness, paralysis, or other
nervous system (neurologic) symptoms that cannot be explained by medical evaluation”;
symptoms may arise after a psychological trauma (PubMed Health, 2010b).
Depression – “mood disorder in which feelings of sadness, loss, anger, or frustration
interfere with everyday life for weeks or longer” (PubMed Health, 2011a); symptoms
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may include (but are not limited to) agitation, restlessness, fatigue, feelings of
hopelessness and helplessness, feelings of worthlessness, self-hate and guilt, thoughts of
death or suicide, and trouble sleeping or excessive sleeping.
Dialectical Behavior Therapy - combines standard cognitive-behavioral therapy
techniques with techniques derived from Zen Buddhist meditative practice, such as
distress tolerance and mindful awareness (Palmer, 2002).
Gross national income (GNI) – “the sum of value added by all resident producers plus
any product taxes (less subsidies) not included in the evaluation of output plus net
receipts of primary income (compensation of employees and property income) from
abroad; GNI per capita is gross national income divided by mid-year population”
(UNICEF, 2012).
Grounded Theory – “the process of developing empirical theory from qualitative
research” based on the principles of a circular data analysis, use of verbatim transcripts,
the interconnectedness between data collection and analysis, inductive analytic concepts,
reflexive memo writing, and analysis that goes beyond description to develop
“explanatory frameworks and theory” (Hennink, Hutter, & Bailey, 2011).
Human development index (HDI) – tool developed by the United Nations to measure
and rank a country’s level of social and economic development; based on four criteria:
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life expectancy at birth, mean years of schooling, expected years of schooling and gross
national income per capita (Investopedia.com, 2012).
Instrumental suicidal behavior – describes a situation in which an individual engages in
an act or makes claims that they are going to commit suicide in order to gain attention or
other support, but the person does not intend to die (Oquendo, Halberstam, & Mann,
2003).
Lower and middle-income countries (LMIC) –lower income countries are those with a
GNI of $1,005 or less and lower middle-income countries are those with a GNI between
$1,0006-$3,975 (The World Bank, 2012).
Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) - anxiety disorder triggered by exposure to a
traumatic experience; there are three main clusters of symptoms: those related to reexperiencing the event; those related to avoidance and arousal; and the distress and
impairment caused by the first two symptom clusters (Hetrick, Purcell, Garner B., & R.,
2010).
Suicide – “death caused by self-directed injurious behavior with any intent to die as a
result of the behavior” (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 2011a).
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Suicide attempt – “a non-fatal, self-directed, potentially injurious behavior with any
intent to die as a result of the behavior” (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,
2011a).
Suicidal ideation – “thinking about, considering or planning for suicide” (Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention, 2011a)